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Observational Study
. 2024 Oct 24:33:e49.
doi: 10.1017/S2045796024000544.

Challenges in transitioning from adolescent to Adult Mental Health Services for young adults with ADHD in Italy: an observational study

Affiliations
Observational Study

Challenges in transitioning from adolescent to Adult Mental Health Services for young adults with ADHD in Italy: an observational study

Elisa Roberti et al. Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci. .

Abstract

Aims: Ensuring a successful transition to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) is fundamental for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) patients to prevent adverse scenarios in adults (e.g., psychiatric disorders, substance or alcohol abuse). Yet, most European nations do not have appropriate transition guidelines and still fail to adequately support transition processes. This study aims to enquire about the current transition paths in Italy and the perceived experiences of the patients and their clinicians.

Methods: The present observational study collected 36 interviews with young adults with ADHD who turned 18 between 2017 and 2021. Simultaneously, two questionnaires were filled in by the clinicians (both from paediatric and AMHS) who were involved in their transition paths. These tools collected information about the transition process, the services that cared for the young adults and well-being indicators such as impairment in daily life, employment status and the presence of sentinel events (e.g., critical stage accesses to the emergency room or hospitalizations). Successful and failed referrals were analysed.

Results: A referral to an AMHS was attempted for 16 young adults (8 before age 18 and 8 when turning 18), and 8 patients (22.2% overall) were successfully taken into the care of the AMHS. Twenty patients were not referred since it was deemed unnecessary (N = 6) or because of the lack of specialized services or compliance (N = 14). At the time of the interview, only nine participants were still under AMHS care. Of eleven individuals with a high need for care (identified by the level of impairment, support needs or sentinel events), five were not followed by a mental health professional at the time of the interview.

Conclusions: For the majority of ADHD young adults, a transition path was never started or completed. While this is partly due to mild levels of impairment, in many cases it was difficult to find a service that could care for the adult patient. Only one out of four young adults are successfully transferred to AMHS care. Creating or improving evidence-based transition guidelines should be a priority of the public health system to ensure healthcare for as many patients as possible. The results of this study will converge towards the need for recommendations for the transition of services from adolescence to adulthood for young people with ADHD for Italian clinical practice.

Keywords: ADHD; AMHS; CAMHS; transition care.

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Conflict of interest statement

None.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Timeline of the patients’ path. The participants of the present study turned eighteen between 2017 and 2021. They were all interviewed in 2023, and questions were related to the “last year”. Other questions referred to the time between young adults turning 18 and the year before the interview, defined as the “intermediate period.”
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Flowchart representing the number of ADHD patients born in the target years for each service involved in the study and their continuation of care path with the service up until the study.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Types of treatment reported by the thirty-six young adults interviewed.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Paths of referred vs. non-referred patients.

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