A case control and follow-up study of “hard to reach” young people who also suffered from multiple complex mental disorders - 08/07/17
Résumé |
Aims |
To describe the mental disorders and social function of the hard to reach young people (HTRYP) from the innovations project (IP) and compare to a matched sample from a community mental health team (CMHT).
Background |
IP was a new multidisciplinary team based within an inner city, walk-in health centre, North East England (throughout 2011).
Methods |
Phase 1 and 2: retrospective review of clinical case notes of YP who attended the IP and CMHT. Phase 3: 24-months follow-up evaluation of the mental state and social function, using Health of the Nation Outcome Scales for Child and Adolescent Mental Health (HoNOSCA) and Children's Global Assessment Scale (CGAS).
Results |
Overall, 36 referrals accepted by the IP, 31 met criteria for HTRYP, 15 were offered individually tailored therapy. IP group experienced more deprivation compared to the CMHT matched sample (n=115). At baseline, the HTRYP had more mental disorders, higher severity scores and lower levels of social function (HTRYP HoNOSCA mean: 19.1 and CMHT mean: 11.2 P=<0.001 and HTRYP CGAS mean: 51.0, CMHT mean: 58.9, P=0.05). The HTRYP made significantly greater improvement compared to CMHTYP; (HoNOSCA P=<0.001 and CGAS P=<0.002). Thirteen HTRYP attended the follow-up review at 24 months compared with nine of CMHTYP. There was great variability in terms of social function between the YP within each sample.
Conclusion |
The term “HTR” describes a state, which the YP may be at a particular point their lives. A service, which utilises a developmental theoretical framework, offers regular reviews and an individualised care plan, could reduce longer-term morbidity and mortality suffered by HTRYP.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Plan
Vol 41 - N° S
P. S82 - avril 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?