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Journal Article

Citation

Edbrooke-Childs J, Rashid A, Ritchie B, Deighton J. BMC Psychiatry 2022; 22(1): e229.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s12888-022-03837-y

PMID

35361193

PMCID

PMC8973575

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To examine the predictors of treatment outcome or improvement in mental health difficulties for young people accessing child and adolescent mental health services.

METHODS: We conducted a secondary analysis of routinely collected data from services in England using the Mental Health Services Data Set. We conducted multilevel regressions on N = 5907 episodes from 14 services (M(age) = 13.76 years, SD(age) = 2.45, range = 8-25 years; 3540 or 59.93% female) with complete information on mental health difficulties at baseline. We conduct similar analyses on N = 1805 episodes from 10 services (M(age) = 13.59 years, SD(age) = 2.33, range = 8-24 years; 1120 or 62.05% female) also with complete information on mental health difficulties at follow up.

RESULTS: Girls had higher levels of mental health difficulties at baseline than boys (β = 0.28, 95% CI = 0.24-0.32). Young people with higher levels of mental health difficulties at baseline also had higher levels of deterioration in mental health difficulties at follow up (β = 0.72, 95% CI = 0.67-0.76), and girls had higher levels of deterioration in mental health difficulties at follow up than boys (β = 0.09, 95% CI = 0.03-0.16). Young people with social anxiety, panic disorder, low mood, or self-harm had higher levels of mental health difficulties at baseline and of deterioration in mental health difficulties at follow up compared to young people without these presenting problems.

CONCLUSIONS: Services seeing higher proportions of young people with higher levels of mental health difficulties at baseline, social anxiety, panic disorder, low mood, or self-harm may be expected to show lower levels of improvement in mental health difficulties at follow up.


Language: en

Keywords

Mental health; Case-mix; Child and adolescent; Treatment outcome

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