| Literature DB >> 29988308 |
Pola Heimann1, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann1, Jonas Buning1, Norbert Wagner2, Claudia Stollbrink-Peschgens2, Astrid Dempfle3, Georg G von Polier1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This naturalistic study assesses the effectiveness of inpatient multidisciplinary treatment of children and adolescents with somatic symptom disorders (SSD) and investigates the role of pain coping strategies and psychiatric comorbidity (anxiety, depression).Entities:
Keywords: Comorbidity; Multidisciplinary treatment; Pain coping strategies; School attendance; Somatic symptom disorder
Year: 2018 PMID: 29988308 PMCID: PMC6022439 DOI: 10.1186/s13034-018-0239-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health ISSN: 1753-2000 Impact factor: 3.033
Demographic and clinical data
| Mean [SD] | |
|---|---|
| Sample size (n) | 60 |
| Female (%) | 56.7 |
| Age | 14.43 [2.0] |
| Duration of treatment (days) | 48.15 [19.7] |
|
| |
| A primary diagnosis | |
| Somatoform disorder (F45.x) | 47 [78.3] |
| Dissociative (conversion) disorder (F44.x) | 4 [6.7] |
| Other pediatric diagnosisa | 9 [15] |
| B comorbidities | |
| Depressive episode (F32.x) | 27 [45] |
| Phobic/other anxiety disorder (F40.x/F41.x) | 24 [40] |
| Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (F90.x) | 22 [36.7] |
| Other Fb—diagnoses | 23 [38.3] |
a Rheumatic diseases (n = 2), migraine (n = 1), obesity (n = 5), chronic inflammatory bowel syndrome (n = 1)
b Obsessive–compulsive disorder (F42.x, n = 2), reaction to severe stress and adjustment disorder (F43.x, n = 6), specific developmental disorders of scholastic skills (F81.x, n = 4), mixed disorders of conduct and emotions (F92.x, n = 1), emotional disorders with onsets specific to childhood (F93.x, n = 1), tic disorders (F95.x, n = 1), somatoform disorder (F45.x, n = 1)
Discomfort, pain coping and comorbidity
| Measures | Admission | Discharge | Six months after discharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIKJa | 55.67 [10.08] | 49.22 [11.42]* | 45.05 [13.73]** |
| SCASb | 26.44 [15.07] | 20.08 [17.47]* | 15.38 [15.47]** |
| GBB-SBb | 59.15 [11.03] | 48.96 [14.38]** | 48.38 [13.63]** |
| PPCIb | 22.86 [8.67] | 18.68 [7.14]* | 14.21 [7.87]** |
| PASc | 10.20 [4.42] | 6.42 [3.78]** | 6.11 [3.80]** |
| SSc | 4.76 [3.97] | 3.33 [2.61]* | 1.86 [2.40]** |
| POSc | 8.47 [3.29] | 9.16 [3.70] | 6.31 [4.19] |
| School absenced [in days] | 11.92 [7.05] | 2.41 [4.28]** | |
| None | 5 (10.2%) | 29 (64.4%) | |
| Moderate | 6 (12.2%) | 10 (22.2%) | |
| High | 38 (77.6%) | 6 (13.3%) |
Means and standard-deviations in brackets
* Significant at p < 0.0033 compared with pretreatment data; ** p < 0.001
a T-value
b Raw-value
c PAS passive strategies, ss seeking for social support, POS positive self-instruction
d School absence in days for the prior 4 weeks; none = 0–1 days, moderate = 2–5 days, high = > 5 days (%); these subgroups were not included in the comparison tests
Fig. 1School absence at 4 weeks prior to treatment (T1) and 6 months following treatment (T3). None: 0–1, moderate: 2–5, high: 6–20 school days missed over 4 weeks; (%): percent of all patients; total [MD]: number of missed school days (mean duration over 4 weeks)