4.7 Article

Addressing transition to adult health care for adolescents with special health care needs

Journal

PEDIATRICS
Volume 115, Issue 6, Pages 1607-1612

Publisher

AMER ACAD PEDIATRICS
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2004-0458

Keywords

transition to adulthood; adolescent; special health care needs; chronic illness; disability

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Objective. To determine the factors associated with addressing the transition from pediatric to adult-oriented health care among US adolescents with special health care needs. Methods. Data for 4332 adolescents, 14 to 17 years of age, from the 2000-2001 National Survey of Children With Special Health Care Needs were used. The adequacy of transition services was determined by parent self-report. Explanatory variables, including parental education, family poverty status, race/ethnicity, measures of the severity and complexity of conditions, health insurance status, having a personal doctor, and the quality of the parent's relationship with the adolescent's doctor, were entered into a regression model. Results. Overall, 50.2% of parents reported that they had discussed transition issues with their adolescent's doctor and 16.4% had discussed and developed a plan for addressing those needs. In a multivariate regression analysis, correlates of the adequacy of transition services included older age, female gender, complexity of health care needs, and higher quality of the parent-doctor relationship. Conclusions. Among adolescents with special health care needs, those who were older and those with more complicated needs were more likely to have addressed the transition from a pediatric to adult-oriented system of care. Furthermore, this analysis demonstrated a strong association between a high-quality parent-provider relationship and the extent to which transition issues were addressed. The importance of transition services for adolescents with less complex needs and the overall impact of health care transition services were not assessed in this study and remain important questions for future investigations.

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