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Treated Versus Untreated Mental Health Problems in Adolescents: A Six-year Comparison of Emotional and Behavioral Problem Trajectories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

F. Jörg*
Affiliation:
University Medical Center Groningen UMCG, ICPE, Groningen, The Netherlands
D. Raven
Affiliation:
University Medical Center Groningen UMCG, ICPE, Groningen, The Netherlands
E. Visser
Affiliation:
University Medical Center Groningen UMCG, ICPE, Groningen, The Netherlands
R. Schoevers
Affiliation:
University Medical Center Groningen UMCG, UCP, Groningen, The Netherlands
T. Oldehinkel
Affiliation:
University Medical Center Groningen UMCG, ICPE, Groningen, The Netherlands
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

Multidisciplinary guidelines in adolescent mental health care are based on RCTs, while treatment efficacy can be different from effectiveness seen in ‘the real world’. Studies in the real world conducted so far suggest that treatment has a negligible effect on follow-up symptomatology. However, these studies did not incorporate the pre-treatment trajectory of symptoms nor investigated a dose-response relationship.

Objectives

To test whether future treatment users and non-users differed in emotional and behavioural problem scores, whether specialist mental health treatment (SMHT) was effective in reducing problem levels while controlling for pre-treatment trajectory, and to seek evidence of a dose-response relationship.

Methods

Six-year follow up data were used from the Tracking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS). We identified adolescents with a clinical level of problem behaviour on the Child Behaviour Checklist or Youth Self Report and first SMHT between the ages 13 and 16. Adolescents with a clinical level of problem behaviour but without SMHT use served as control group. A psychiatric case register provided data on number of treatment contacts. Using regression analysis, we predicted the effect of treatment on post-treatment problem scores.

Results

Treated adolescents more often had a (severe) diagnosis than untreated adolescents. Pre-treatment trajectories barely differed between treated and untreated adolescents. Treatment predicted an increase in follow-up problem scores, regardless of the number of sessions.

Conclusion

The quasi-experimental design calls for modest conclusions. We might however need to take a closer look at real-world service delivery, and invest in developing treatments that can achieve sustainable benefits.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster walk: Child and adolescent psychiatry–part 2
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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