Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Pediatr Rheumatol Online J. 2021 Feb 23;19(1):19. doi: 10.1186/s12969-021-00503-7.
Mental health disorders are common in youth with rheumatological disease yet optimal intervention strategies are understudied in this population. We examined patient and parent perspectives on mental health intervention for youth with rheumatological disease.
We conducted a mixed methods cross-sectional study, via anonymous online survey, developed by researchers together with patient/parent partners, to quantitatively and qualitatively examine youth experiences with mental health services and resources in North America. Patients ages 14-24 years with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, juvenile dermatomyositis, or systemic lupus erythematous, and parents of patients ages 8-24 with these diseases were eligible (not required to participate in pairs). Participants self-reported mental health problems (categorized into clinician-diagnosed disorders vs self-diagnosed symptoms) and treatments (e.g. therapy, medications) received for the youth. Multivariate linear regression models compared patient and parent mean Likert ratings for level of: i) comfort with mental health providers, and ii) barriers to seeking mental health services, adjusting for potential confounders (patient age, gender, disease duration, and patient/parent visual analog score for disease-related health). Participants indicated usefulness of mental health resources; text responses describing these experiences were analyzed by qualitative description.
Participants included 123 patients and 324 parents. Patients reported clinician-diagnosed anxiety (39%) and depression (35%); another 27 and 18% endorsed self-diagnosed symptoms of these disorders, respectively. 80% of patients with clinician-diagnosed disorders reported receiving treatment, while 11% of those with self-diagnosed symptoms reported any treatment. Patients were less comfortable than parents with all mental health providers. The top two barriers to treatment for patients and parents were concerns about mental health providers not understanding the rheumatological disease, and inadequate insurance coverage. Over 60% had used patient mental health resources, and over 60% of these participants found them to be helpful, although text responses identified a desire for resources tailored to patients with rheumatological disease.
Self-reported mental health problems are prevalent for youth in this sample with rheumatological disease, and obstacles to mental health treatment include disease-related and logistic factors. Strategies are needed to improve acceptance and accessibility of mental health intervention, including routine mental health screening and availability of disease-specific mental health resources.
精神健康障碍在患有风湿病的年轻人中很常见,但针对该人群的最佳干预策略研究还很不足。我们研究了患者和家长对风湿病青少年心理健康干预的看法。
我们通过匿名在线调查开展了一项混合方法的横断面研究,该调查由研究人员与患者/家长伙伴共同制定,以定量和定性地研究北美青少年获得心理健康服务和资源的情况。14-24 岁患有幼年特发性关节炎、青少年皮肌炎或系统性红斑狼疮的患者,以及 8-24 岁患有这些疾病的患者的家长有资格参与(不是必须共同参与)。参与者自我报告了青少年的心理健康问题(分为临床诊断障碍与自我诊断症状)和接受的治疗(例如,治疗、药物)。多变量线性回归模型比较了患者和家长对以下方面的平均李克特评分:i)对心理健康提供者的舒适度,以及 ii)寻求心理健康服务的障碍,同时调整了潜在混杂因素(患者年龄、性别、疾病持续时间以及患者/家长与疾病相关的健康的视觉模拟评分)。参与者还指出了心理健康资源的有用性;通过定性描述分析了描述这些经历的文本回复。
参与者包括 123 名患者和 324 名家长。患者报告了临床诊断的焦虑(39%)和抑郁(35%);另外 27%和 18%分别报告了这些疾病的自我诊断症状。80%有临床诊断障碍的患者报告接受了治疗,而 11%有自我诊断症状的患者报告接受了任何治疗。患者对所有心理健康提供者的舒适度均低于家长。患者和家长治疗的前两个障碍是担心心理健康提供者不了解风湿病,以及保险覆盖不足。超过 60%的患者使用过患者心理健康资源,超过 60%的患者认为这些资源有帮助,尽管文本回复表明希望提供针对风湿病患者的资源。
在这个风湿病患者样本中,自我报告的心理健康问题很普遍,心理健康治疗的障碍包括与疾病相关的因素和后勤因素。需要采取策略来提高对心理健康干预的接受度和可及性,包括常规心理健康筛查和提供针对特定疾病的心理健康资源。