| Literature DB >> 33898364 |
Irene Elgen1,2, Ragnhild Lygre1, Gottfried Greve3,4, Silja Griffiths5, Torhild Heggestad6.
Abstract
Aims: To describe the care patterns of patients with repeated referrals to both mental and somatic specialist healthcare, and to study their diagnostic processes.Entities:
Keywords: child; diagnostic overshadowing; health services; mental health; multi-referrals; non-specific condition; patient flow; psychosomatics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33898364 PMCID: PMC8058187 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.656939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Flow chart showing the selection of study population from the register data of children aged 6–12 years referred to a regional university hospital over a 3-year period (2013–2015).
Figure 2Figure illustrating the design of the different study periods. The pre-inclusion period included all hospital referrals from the first ever until inclusion in the study. Follow-up was continued for three referrals after inclusion or until July 1st 2017. The sign X refers to the referral that merited inclusion i.e., third or more referral including both mental and somatic care service.
Referral patterns and diagnostic status of the 250 patients in the period prior to inclusion in the study.
| Boys | 165 (66%) |
| Mean age in months | 82 (SD:34) |
| Mean number of all previous primary referrals | 6.5 (SD:2.8) |
| Mean number of previous rejected primary referrals | 2.0 (SD:0.4) |
| Mean number of previous secondary referrals | 1.7 (SD:1.6) |
| Patients with specific diagnoses | 73 (29%) |
| Patients with no registered diagnoses | 129 (52%) |
| Patients with non-specific diagnoses | 48 (19%) |
Children aged 6–12 years who had at least three referrals including both mental and somatic healthcare to a regional university hospital from 2013 to 2015.
Diagnose from the last episode associated with the last referral before the inclusion period.
Secondary referrals are defined as referrals generated within the hospital.
Non-specific diagnose defined as R or Z chapter diagnoses in the International Classification of Diseases, tenth revision.
Referral patterns and diagnostic status of the patients in the observational period.
| Mean total number of primary referrals | 4.2 (SD:0.8) |
| Mean number of rejected primary referrals | 0.6 (SD:0.2) |
| Mean number of secondary referrals | 0.6 (SD:0.4) |
| Patients with specific diagnoses | 213 (85%) |
| Independent | 185 |
| Related | 28 |
| Patients with non-specific diagnoses | 36 (15%) |
Characteristics of 250 randomly selected children aged 6–12 years who had at least three referrals including both mental and somatic healthcare to a regional university hospital from 2013 to 2015.
Secondary referrals are defined as referrals generated within the hospital.
Diagnostic data from medical records of the referral by the time of inclusion and those in the follow-up period. The follow-up period included data until June 30, 2017 or two new referrals.
Independent was defined as having several diagnoses that are not related.
Related was defined as having several diagnoses that are related to one another.
Non-specific diagnose defined as either R or Z chapter diagnoses in the International Classification of Diseases, tenth revision.
The care pathway in specialist health services for 249 children.
| Inclusion referral | At 3rd referral | % of subgroup | ||
| Mental care | 60 | |||
| Cross over to somatic care | 47 | 78% | ||
| 13 | ||||
| Paediatric dept. | 69 | |||
| Cross over to mental care | 27 | 39% | ||
| 42 | ||||
| Other somatic dept. | 59 | |||
| Cross over to mental care | 27 | 45% | ||
| 32 | ||||
| All patients | 188 | |||
| Patients with cross over | 101 | 54% |
Children (6–12 years of age) with two or more referrals in the inclusion period (2013–2015) and followed for their possible next three referrals or to July 2017.