Differences in treatment trajectory following brief paediatric inpatient admissions for children and young people with eating disorders

Author:

El‐Salahi Shama1ORCID,Anderson Ciorsdan2,McDaid Alannah3,Lunn Amy1,Ralph Emily1,Holliday Joanna1

Affiliation:

1. Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust Oxford UK

2. Oxford Institute of Clinical Psychology Training and Research Oxford UK

3. University of Exeter Exeter UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveLittle is known about factors associated with treatment trajectory following brief paediatric admissions for children and young people (CYP) admitted for medical complications of their eating disorder (ED). This project aimed to identify possible factors and ways to improve the usefulness of paediatric admissions.MethodRetrospective NHS data was analysed to explore differences between paediatric admissions followed by community‐based care or inpatient psychiatric care. Twelve parents were interviewed to seek feedback about paediatric admissions.ResultsPatients who received subsequent inpatient psychiatric care were unwell for longer, had longer paediatric admissions and more crisis team input, were more likely to have had previous admissions, and had higher parent‐reported anxiety and depression. However, the groups did not significantly differ in ED severity. The interviews identified recommendations for improving paediatric admissions, which included improving understanding of EDs, enhancing communication channels, and providing psychological support to parents.ConclusionsFactors linked with illness severity (but not illness severity itself) appear to be associated with the difference between CYP either returning to community‐based care or requiring more intensive psychiatric input. These factors may help clinicians understand who requires subsequent inpatient care, allowing clinicians to target more intensive support earlier and facilitate smoother transitions between services.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference36 articles.

1. BEAT. (2015).The costs of eating disorders: Social health and economic impacts.https://www.beateatingdisorders.org.uk

2. Readiness to change mediates the impact of eating disorder symptomatology on treatment outcome in anorexia nervosa

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