4.4 Review

Pathways to mental health services for young people: a systematic review

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 10, Pages 1005-1038

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00127-018-1578-y

Keywords

Youth mental health; Mental health services; Pathways to care; Help-seeking behaviour; Treatment delays

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Foundation Grant
  2. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante (FRQS)
  3. Quebec's Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research Support Unit
  4. ACCESS Open Minds Doctoral Studentship
  5. New Investigator Fellowship from the Ontario Mental Health Foundation
  6. Ontario Ministry of Research, Innovation, and Science
  7. CIHR New Investigator Salary Award Program
  8. FRQS

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Purpose While early access to appropriate care can minimise the sequelae of mental illnesses, little is known about how youths come to access mental healthcare. We therefore conducted a systematic review to synthesise literature on the pathways to care of youths across a range of mental health problems. Methods Studies were identified through searches of electronic databases (MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Embase, HealthSTAR and CINAHL), supplemented by backward and forward mapping and hand searching. We included studies on the pathways to mental healthcare of individuals aged 11-30 years. Two reviewers independently screened articles and extracted data. Results Forty-five studies from 26 countries met eligibility criteria. The majority of these studies were from settings that offered services for the early stages of psychosis, and others included inpatient and outpatient settings targeting wide-ranging mental health problems. Generally, youths' pathways to mental healthcare were complex, involved diverse contacts, and, sometimes, undue treatment delays. Across contexts, family/carers, general practitioners and emergency rooms featured prominently in care pathways. There was little standardization in the measurement of pathways. Conclusions Except in psychosis, youths' pathways to mental healthcare remain understudied. Pathways to care research may need to be reconceptualised to account for the often transient and overlapping nature of youth mental health presentations, and the possibility that what constitutes optimal care may vary. Despite these complexities, additional research, using standardized methodology, can yield a greater understanding of the help-seeking behaviours of youths and those acting on their behalf; service responses to help-seeking; and the determinants of pathways. This understanding is critical to inform ongoing initatives to transform youth mental healthcare.

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