The Association Between Trajectories of Self-reported Psychotic Experiences and Continuity of Mental Health Care in a Longitudinal Cohort of Adolescents and Young Adults

Suzanne E. Gerritsen, Koen Bolhuis, Larissa S. van Bodegom, Athanasios Maras, Mathilde M. Overbeek, Therese A. M. J. van Amelsvoort, Dieter Wolke, Giovanni de Girolamo, Tomislav Franic, Jason Madan, Fiona McNicholas, Moli Paul, Diane Purper-Ouakil, Paramala Santosh, Ulrike M. E. Schulze, Swaran P. Singh, Cathy Street, Sabine Tremmery, Helena Tuomainen, Gwen C. Dieleman*Esther Mesman

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background and Hypothesis Young people (YP) with psychotic experiences (PE) have an increased risk of developing a psychiatric disorder. Therefore, knowledge on continuity of care from child and adolescent (CAMHS) to adult mental health services (AMHS) in relation to PE is important. Here, we investigated whether the self-reported trajectories of persistent PE were associated with likelihood of transition to AMHS and mental health outcomes.Study Design In this prospective cohort study, interviews and questionnaires were used to assess PE, mental health, and service use in 763 child and adolescent mental health service users reaching their service's upper age limit in 8 European countries. Trajectories of self-reported PE (3 items) from baseline to 24-month follow-up were determined using growth mixture modeling (GMM). Associations were assessed with auxiliary variables and using mixed models. Study results. At baseline, 56.7% of YP reported PE. GMM identified 5 trajectories over 24 months: medium increasing (5.2%), medium stable (11.7%), medium decreasing (6.5%), high decreasing (4.2%), and low stable (72.4%). PE trajectories were not associated with continuity of specialist care or transition to AMHS. Overall, YP with PE reported more mental health problems at baseline. Persistence of PE or an increase was associated with poorer outcomes at follow-up.Conclusions PE are common among CAMHS users when reaching the upper age limit of CAMHS. Persistence or an increase of PE was associated with poorer mental health outcomes, poorer prognosis, and impaired functioning, but were less discriminative for continuity of care.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1282-1295
Number of pages14
JournalSchizophrenia Bulletin
Volume51
Issue number5
Early online date1 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2025

Keywords

  • adolescent
  • young adult
  • transition to adult care
  • psychotic disorders
  • mental health services
  • psychotic symptoms
  • DSM-IV DISORDERS
  • CHILDHOOD
  • SERVICES
  • TRANSITION
  • OUTCOMES
  • PEOPLE
  • SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • METAANALYSIS
  • SYMPTOMS
  • SUICIDALITY

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