4.5 Article

Clinical features of functional somatic symptoms in children and referral patterns to child and adolescent mental health services

Journal

ACTA PAEDIATRICA
Volume 105, Issue 5, Pages 514-521

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/apa.13310

Keywords

Child; Child and adolescent mental health services; Functional somatic symptoms; Somatisation

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Funding

  1. Psychiatric Research Foundation, Region of Southern Denmark

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AimFunctional somatic symptoms (FSS) are common in paediatric patients who are referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS), but little is known about current referral practices. The aim of this study was to systematically investigate clinical features of paediatric inpatients with FSS referred to CAMHS and to describe why paediatricians referred them. MethodsThe study population comprised 60 children with FSS admitted to a large Danish paediatric department during 2012. We compared medical record data on the clinical characteristics and paediatric management of 16 children who had been referred and 44 children who had not. ResultsMost paediatric records lacked information on psychosocial factors and symptoms. Referred children were significantly more multisymptomatic of FSS (p < 0.01) than the controls, had longer symptom duration, underwent more clinical investigations, had longer paediatric admissions of at least two weeks and received more treatment elements before referral. The most frequently stated referral reason was inadequate treatment response. ConclusionPaediatric inpatients with more severe FSS were more likely to be referred to CAMHS, but referral reasons were generally vague and psychosocial information was frequently missing. Clinical guidelines are needed to improve and systematise mental health referrals for children with FSS.

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