71 results on '"Franić, T."'
Search Results
2. Effect of managed transition on mental health outcomes for young people at the child-adult mental health service boundary:A randomised clinical trial
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Singh, S. P., Tuomainen, H., Bouliotis, G., Canaway, A., De Girolamo, G., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., Madan, J., Maras, A., McNicholas, F., Paul, M., Purper-Ouakil, D., Santosh, P., Schulze, U. M.E., Street, C., Tremmery, S., Verhulst, F. C., Wells, P., Wolke, D., Warwick, J., Tah, Priya, Griffin, James, Appleton, Rebecca, Heaney, Natalie, Lievesley, Kate, Mastroianni, Mathilde, Singh, Jatinder, Adams, Laura, Signorini, Giulia, Ferrari, Alessandro, Gheza, Elisa, Ferrari, Cecilia, Rivolta, Laura, Levi, Flavia, Cataldo, Maria, Manenti, Lidia, Morini, Giorgia, Pastore, Adriana, Stagni, Pamela, Toselli, Cecilia, Varvara, Pamela, Russet, Frédérick, Maurice, Virginie, Humbertclaude, Véronique, Bodegom, Larissa S.Van, Overbeek, Mathilde M., Gerritsen, Suzanne E., Saam, Melanie, Breuninger, Ulrike, Hendrickx, Gaëlle, Singh, S. P., Tuomainen, H., Bouliotis, G., Canaway, A., De Girolamo, G., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., Madan, J., Maras, A., McNicholas, F., Paul, M., Purper-Ouakil, D., Santosh, P., Schulze, U. M.E., Street, C., Tremmery, S., Verhulst, F. C., Wells, P., Wolke, D., Warwick, J., Tah, Priya, Griffin, James, Appleton, Rebecca, Heaney, Natalie, Lievesley, Kate, Mastroianni, Mathilde, Singh, Jatinder, Adams, Laura, Signorini, Giulia, Ferrari, Alessandro, Gheza, Elisa, Ferrari, Cecilia, Rivolta, Laura, Levi, Flavia, Cataldo, Maria, Manenti, Lidia, Morini, Giorgia, Pastore, Adriana, Stagni, Pamela, Toselli, Cecilia, Varvara, Pamela, Russet, Frédérick, Maurice, Virginie, Humbertclaude, Véronique, Bodegom, Larissa S.Van, Overbeek, Mathilde M., Gerritsen, Suzanne E., Saam, Melanie, Breuninger, Ulrike, and Hendrickx, Gaëlle
- Abstract
Background Poor transition planning contributes to discontinuity of care at the child-adult mental health service boundary (SB), adversely affecting mental health outcomes in young people (YP). The aim of the study was to determine whether managed transition (MT) improves mental health outcomes of YP reaching the child/adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) boundary compared with usual care (UC). Methods A two-arm cluster-randomised trial (ISRCTN83240263 and NCT03013595) with clusters allocated 1:2 between MT and UC. Recruitment took place in 40 CAMHS (eight European countries) between October 2015 and December 2016.
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- 2023
3. The importance of clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their mental health services in Europe
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van Bodegom, L, Gerritsen, S, Dieleman, G, Overbeek, M, de Girolamo, G, Scocco, P, Hillegers, M, Wolke, D, Rizopoulos, D, Appleton, R, Conti, P, Franić, T, Margari, F, Madan, J, Mcnicholas, F, Nacinovich, R, Pastore, A, Paul, M, Purper-Ouakil, D, Saam, M, Santosh, P, Sartor, A, Schulze, U, Signorini, G, Singh, S, Street, C, Tah, P, Tanase, E, Tremmery, S, Tuomainen, H, Maras, A, van Bodegom, Larissa S, Gerritsen, Suzanne E, Dieleman, Gwendolyn C, Overbeek, Mathilde M, de Girolamo, Giovanni, Scocco, Paolo, Hillegers, Manon H J, Wolke, Dieter, Rizopoulos, Dimitris, Appleton, Rebecca, Conti, Patrizia, Franić, Tomislav, Margari, Francesco, Madan, Jason, McNicholas, Fiona, Nacinovich, Renata, Pastore, Adriana, Paul, Moli, Purper-Ouakil, Diane, Saam, Melanie C, Santosh, Paramala J, Sartor, Anne, Schulze, Ulrike M E, Signorini, Giulia, Singh, Swaran P, Street, Cathy, Tah, Priya, Tanase, Elena, Tremmery, Sabine, Tuomainen, Helena, Maras, Athanasios, van Bodegom, L, Gerritsen, S, Dieleman, G, Overbeek, M, de Girolamo, G, Scocco, P, Hillegers, M, Wolke, D, Rizopoulos, D, Appleton, R, Conti, P, Franić, T, Margari, F, Madan, J, Mcnicholas, F, Nacinovich, R, Pastore, A, Paul, M, Purper-Ouakil, D, Saam, M, Santosh, P, Sartor, A, Schulze, U, Signorini, G, Singh, S, Street, C, Tah, P, Tanase, E, Tremmery, S, Tuomainen, H, Maras, A, van Bodegom, Larissa S, Gerritsen, Suzanne E, Dieleman, Gwendolyn C, Overbeek, Mathilde M, de Girolamo, Giovanni, Scocco, Paolo, Hillegers, Manon H J, Wolke, Dieter, Rizopoulos, Dimitris, Appleton, Rebecca, Conti, Patrizia, Franić, Tomislav, Margari, Francesco, Madan, Jason, McNicholas, Fiona, Nacinovich, Renata, Pastore, Adriana, Paul, Moli, Purper-Ouakil, Diane, Saam, Melanie C, Santosh, Paramala J, Sartor, Anne, Schulze, Ulrike M E, Signorini, Giulia, Singh, Swaran P, Street, Cathy, Tah, Priya, Tanase, Elena, Tremmery, Sabine, Tuomainen, Helena, and Maras, Athanasios
- Abstract
Background: To study clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) and its association with mental health indicators, transition recommendations and mental health service (MHS) use. Methods: 763 CAMHS users from eight European countries were assessed using multi-informant and standardised assessment tools at baseline and nine months follow-up. Separate ANCOVA's and pairwise comparisons were conducted to assess whether clinicians' and parents' awareness of young people's suicidal behaviour were associated with mental health indicators, clinician's recommendations to continue treatment and MHS use at nine months follow-up. Results: 53.5 % of clinicians and 56.9 % of parents were unaware of young people's self-reported suicidal behaviour at baseline. Compared to those whose clinicians/parents were aware, unawareness was associated with a 72–80 % lower proportion of being recommended to continue treatment. Self-reported mental health problems at baseline were comparable for young people whose clinicians and parents were aware and unaware of suicidal behaviour. Clinicians' and parents' unawareness were not associated with MHS use at follow-up. Limitations: Aspects of suicidal behaviour, such as suicide ideation, -plans and -attempts, could not be distinguished. Few young people transitioned to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS), therefore power to study factors associated with AMHS use was limited. Conclusion: Clinicians and parents are often unaware of suicidal behaviour, which decreases the likelihood of a recommendation to continue treatment, but does not seem to affect young people's MHS use or their mental health problems.
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- 2023
4. Correction to: Managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health Care in Europe (MILESTONE): background, rationale and methodology
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Tuomainen, H., Schulze, U., Warwick, J., Paul, M., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., de Girolamo, G., Madan, J., Maras, A., McNicholas, F., Purper-Ouakil, D., Santosh, P., Signorini, G., Street, C., Tremmery, S., Verhulst, F. C., Wolke, D., Singh, S. P., and for the MILESTONE consortium
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- 2018
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5. Managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health Care in Europe (MILESTONE): background, rationale and methodology
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Tuomainen, H., Schulze, U., Warwick, J., Paul, M., Dieleman, G.C., Franić, T., Madan, J., Maras, A., McNicholas, F., Purper-Ouakil, D., Santosh, P., Signorini, G., Street, C., Tremmery, S., Verhulst, F.C., Wolke, D., Singh, S. P., and for the MILESTONE consortium
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- 2018
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6. Effect of managed transition on mental health outcomes for young people at the child–adult mental health service boundary : a randomised clinical trial
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Singh, S. P., Tuomainen, H., Bouliotis, G., Canaway, A., De Girolamo, G., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., Madan, J., Maras, A., McNicholas, F., Paul, M., Purper-Ouakil, D., Santosh, P., Schulze, U. M.E., Street, C., Tremmery, S., Verhulst, F. C., Wells, P., Wolke, D., Warwick, J., Tah, Priya, Griffin, James, Appleton, Rebecca, Heaney, Natalie, Lievesley, Kate, Mastroianni, Mathilde, Singh, Jatinder, Adams, Laura, Signorini, Giulia, Ferrari, Alessandro, Gheza, Elisa, Ferrari, Cecilia, Rivolta, Laura, Levi, Flavia, Cataldo, Maria, Manenti, Lidia, Morini, Giorgia, Pastore, Adriana, Stagni, Pamela, Toselli, Cecilia, Varvara, Pamela, Russet, Frédérick, Maurice, Virginie, Humbertclaude, Véronique, Bodegom, Larissa S.Van, Overbeek, Mathilde M., Gerritsen, Suzanne E., Saam, Melanie, Breuninger, Ulrike, Hendrickx, Gaëlle, The MILESTONE Consortium, and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology
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Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.medical_specialty ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,RJ ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Mental health ,Applied Psychology ,Boundary (real estate) ,Mental health service - Abstract
BackgroundPoor transition planning contributes to discontinuity of care at the child–adult mental health service boundary (SB), adversely affecting mental health outcomes in young people (YP). The aim of the study was to determine whether managed transition (MT) improves mental health outcomes of YP reaching the child/adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) boundary compared with usual care (UC).MethodsA two-arm cluster-randomised trial (ISRCTN83240263 and NCT03013595) with clusters allocated 1:2 between MT and UC. Recruitment took place in 40 CAMHS (eight European countries) between October 2015 and December 2016. Eligible participants were CAMHS service users who were receiving treatment or had a diagnosed mental disorder, had an IQ ⩾ 70 and were within 1 year of reaching the SB. MT was a multi-component intervention that included CAMHS training, systematic identification of YP approaching SB, a structured assessment (Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure) and sharing of information between CAMHS and adult mental health services. The primary outcome was HoNOSCA (Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents) score 15-months post-entry to the trial.ResultsThe mean difference in HoNOSCA scores between the MT and UC arms at 15 months was −1.11 points (95% confidence interval −2.07 to −0.14, p = 0.03). The cost of delivering the intervention was relatively modest (€17–€65 per service user).ConclusionsMT led to improved mental health of YP after the SB but the magnitude of the effect was small. The intervention can be implemented at low cost and form part of planned and purposeful transitional care.
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- 2021
7. Evaluation of the association between insight and symptoms in a large sample of patients with schizophrenia
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De Hert, M.A.F., Simon, V., Vidovic, D., Franic, T., Wampers, M., Peuskens, J., and van Winkel, R.
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- 2009
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8. Validation of the Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM) for the Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Healthcare in Europe (MILESTONE) study
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Santosh, P. (Paramala), Singh, J. (Jatinder), Adams, L. (Laura), Mastroianni, M. (Mathilde), Heaney, N. (Natalie), Lievesley, K. (Kate), Sagar-Ouriaghli, I. (Ilyas), Allibrio, G. (Giovanni), Appleton, R. (Rebecca), Davidović, N. (Nikolina), de Girolamo, G. (Giovanni), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Dodig-Ćurković, K. (Katarina), Franić, T. (Tomislav), Gatherer, C. (Charlotte), Gerritsen, S.E. (Suzanne), Gheza, E. (Elisa), Madan, J. (Jason), Manenti, L. (Lidia), Maras, A. (Athanasios), Margari, F. (Francesco), McNicholas, F. (Fiona), Pastore, A. (Adriana), Paul, M. (Moli), Purper-Ouakil, D. (Diane), Rinaldi, F. (Francesco), Sakar, V. (Vehbi), Schulze, U. (Ulrike), Signorini, G. (Giulia), Street, C. (Cathy), Tah, P. (Priya), Tremmery, S. (Sabine), Tuffrey, A. (Amanda), Tuomainen, H. (Helena), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Warwick, J. (Jane), Wilson, A. (Anna), Wolke, D. (Dieter), Fiori, F. (Federico), Singh, S.P. (Swaran), Santosh, P. (Paramala), Singh, J. (Jatinder), Adams, L. (Laura), Mastroianni, M. (Mathilde), Heaney, N. (Natalie), Lievesley, K. (Kate), Sagar-Ouriaghli, I. (Ilyas), Allibrio, G. (Giovanni), Appleton, R. (Rebecca), Davidović, N. (Nikolina), de Girolamo, G. (Giovanni), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Dodig-Ćurković, K. (Katarina), Franić, T. (Tomislav), Gatherer, C. (Charlotte), Gerritsen, S.E. (Suzanne), Gheza, E. (Elisa), Madan, J. (Jason), Manenti, L. (Lidia), Maras, A. (Athanasios), Margari, F. (Francesco), McNicholas, F. (Fiona), Pastore, A. (Adriana), Paul, M. (Moli), Purper-Ouakil, D. (Diane), Rinaldi, F. (Francesco), Sakar, V. (Vehbi), Schulze, U. (Ulrike), Signorini, G. (Giulia), Street, C. (Cathy), Tah, P. (Priya), Tremmery, S. (Sabine), Tuffrey, A. (Amanda), Tuomainen, H. (Helena), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Warwick, J. (Jane), Wilson, A. (Anna), Wolke, D. (Dieter), Fiori, F. (Federico), and Singh, S.P. (Swaran)
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Young people moving from child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) to adult mental health services (AMHS) are faced with significant challenges. To improve this state of affairs, there needs to be a recognition of the problem and initiatives and an urgent requirement for appropriate tools for measuring readiness and outcomes at the transfer boundary (16-18 years of age in Europe). The objective of this study was to develop and
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- 2020
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9. Protocol for the development and validation procedure of the managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health care (MILESTONE) suite of measures
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Santosh, P., Adams, L., Fiori, F., Davidović, N., De Girolamo, G., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., Heaney, N., Lievesley, K., Madan, J., Maras, A., Mastroianni, M., McNicholas, F., Paul, M., Purper-Ouakil, D., Sagar-Ouriaghli, I., Schulze, U., Signorini, G., Street, C., Tah, P., Tremmery, S., Tuomainen, H., Verhulst, F. C., Warwick, J., Wolke, D., Singh, J., Singh, S. P., Santosh, P., Adams, L., Fiori, F., Davidović, N., De Girolamo, G., Dieleman, G. C., Franić, T., Heaney, N., Lievesley, K., Madan, J., Maras, A., Mastroianni, M., McNicholas, F., Paul, M., Purper-Ouakil, D., Sagar-Ouriaghli, I., Schulze, U., Signorini, G., Street, C., Tah, P., Tremmery, S., Tuomainen, H., Verhulst, F. C., Warwick, J., Wolke, D., Singh, J., and Singh, S. P.
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Background: Mental health disorders in the child and adolescent population are a pressing public health concern. Despite the high prevalence of psychopathology in this vulnerable population, the transition from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) has many obstacles such as deficiencies in planning, organisational readiness and policy gaps. All these factors contribute to an inadequate and suboptimal transition process. A suite of measures is required that would allow young people to be assessed in a structured and standardised way to determine the on-going need for care and to improve communication across clinicians at CAMHS and AMHS. This will have the potential to reduce the overall health economic burden and could also improve the quality of life for patients travelling across the transition boundary. The MILESTONE (Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Health Care) project aims to address the significant socioeconomic and societal challenge related to the transition process. This protocol paper describes the development of two MILESTONE transition-related measures: The Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM), designed to be a decision-making aide for clinicians, and the Transition Related Outcome Measure (TROM), for examining the outcome of transition. Methods: The TRAM and TROM have been developed and were validated following the US FDA Guidance for Patient-reported Outcome Measures which follows an incremental stepwise framework. The study gathers information from service users, parents, families and mental health care professionals who have experience working with young people undergoing the transition process from eight European countries. Discussion: There is an urgent need for comprehensive measures that can assess transition across the CAMHS/AMHS boundary. This study protocol describes the process of development of two new transition measures: the
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- 2020
10. Training of adult psychiatrists and child and adolescent psychiatrists in europe
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Singh, S.P. (Swaran), Madan, J. (Jason), Warwick, J. (Jane), Wolke, D. (Dieter), Appleton, R. (Rebecca), Canaway, A. (Alastair), Griffin, J.D. (James), De Girolamo, G. (Giovanni), Santosh, P. (Paramala), Sagar-Ouriaghli, I. (Ilyas), Heaney, N. (Natalie), Maurice, V. (Virginie), Van Bodegom, L. (Larissa), Overbeek, M. (Mathilde), Kooymans, E. (Esther), Schulze, U. (Ulrike), Saam, M. (Melanie), Breuninger, U. (Ulrike), Gronostaj, A. (Aleksandra), Franić, T. (Tomislav), Davidović, N. (Nikolina), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Gerritsen, S.E. (Suzanne), Lievesley, K. (Kate), Tuffrey, A. (Amanda), Wilson, A. (Anna), Gatherer, C. (Charlotte), Walker, L. (Leanne), Russet, F. (Frederick), Humbertclaude, V. (Veronique), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Dodig-Ćurković, K. (Katarina), Hendrickx, G. (Gaelle), Kovač, V. (Vlatka), McNicholas, F. (Fiona), Maras, A. (Athanasios), Paramala, S. (Santosh), Paul, M. (Moli), Schulze, U.M.E. (Ulrike M. E.), Signorini, G. (Giulia), Street, C. (Cathy), Tah, P. (Priya), Tuomainen, H. (Helena), Singh, S.P. (Swaran P.), Tremmery, S. (Sabine), Purper-Ouakil, D. (Diane), Singh, S.P. (Swaran), Madan, J. (Jason), Warwick, J. (Jane), Wolke, D. (Dieter), Appleton, R. (Rebecca), Canaway, A. (Alastair), Griffin, J.D. (James), De Girolamo, G. (Giovanni), Santosh, P. (Paramala), Sagar-Ouriaghli, I. (Ilyas), Heaney, N. (Natalie), Maurice, V. (Virginie), Van Bodegom, L. (Larissa), Overbeek, M. (Mathilde), Kooymans, E. (Esther), Schulze, U. (Ulrike), Saam, M. (Melanie), Breuninger, U. (Ulrike), Gronostaj, A. (Aleksandra), Franić, T. (Tomislav), Davidović, N. (Nikolina), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Gerritsen, S.E. (Suzanne), Lievesley, K. (Kate), Tuffrey, A. (Amanda), Wilson, A. (Anna), Gatherer, C. (Charlotte), Walker, L. (Leanne), Russet, F. (Frederick), Humbertclaude, V. (Veronique), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Dodig-Ćurković, K. (Katarina), Hendrickx, G. (Gaelle), Kovač, V. (Vlatka), McNicholas, F. (Fiona), Maras, A. (Athanasios), Paramala, S. (Santosh), Paul, M. (Moli), Schulze, U.M.E. (Ulrike M. E.), Signorini, G. (Giulia), Street, C. (Cathy), Tah, P. (Priya), Tuomainen, H. (Helena), Singh, S.P. (Swaran P.), Tremmery, S. (Sabine), and Purper-Ouakil, D. (Diane)
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Background: Profound clinical, conceptual and ideological differences between child and adult mental health service models contribute to transition-related discontinuity of care. Many of these may be related to psychiatry training. Methods: A systematic review on General Adult Psychiatry (GAP) and Child and Adult Psychiatry (CAP) training in Europe, with a particular focus on transition as a theme in GAP and CAP training. Results: Thirty-four full-papers, six abstracts and seven additional full text documents were identified. Important variations between countries were found across several domains including assessment of trainees, clinical and educational supervision, psychotherapy training and continuing medical education. Three models of training were identified: i) a generalist common training programme; ii) totally separate training programmes; iii) mixed types. Only two national training programs (UK and Ireland) were identified to have addressed transition as a topic, both involving CAP exclusively. Conclusion: Three models of training in GAP and CAP across Europe are identified, suggesting that the harmonization is not yet realised and a possible barrier to improving transitional care. Training in transition has only recently been considered. It is timely, topical and important to develop evidence-based training approaches on transitional care across Europe into both CAP and GAP training.
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- 2019
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11. Managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health Care in Europe (MILESTONE): Background, rationale and methodology
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Tuomainen, H. (H.), Schulze, U. (U.), Warwick, J. (J.), Paul, M. (M.), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Franić, T. (T.), Madan, J. (J.), Maras, A. (Athanasios), McNicholas, F. (F.), Purper-Ouakil, D. (D.), Santosh, P. (Paramala), Signorini, G. (G.), Street, C. (C.), Tremmery, S. (S.), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Wolke, D. (D.), Sartorius, N. (Norman), McGorry, P. (Pat), Davis, M. (Maryann), Mihai, A. (Adriana), Singh, S.P. (Swaran), Tuomainen, H. (H.), Schulze, U. (U.), Warwick, J. (J.), Paul, M. (M.), Dieleman, G.C. (Gwen), Franić, T. (T.), Madan, J. (J.), Maras, A. (Athanasios), McNicholas, F. (F.), Purper-Ouakil, D. (D.), Santosh, P. (Paramala), Signorini, G. (G.), Street, C. (C.), Tremmery, S. (S.), Verhulst, F.C. (Frank), Wolke, D. (D.), Sartorius, N. (Norman), McGorry, P. (Pat), Davis, M. (Maryann), Mihai, A. (Adriana), and Singh, S.P. (Swaran)
- Abstract
Background: Transition from distinct Child and Adolescent Mental Health (CAMHS) to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) is beset with multitude of problems affecting continuity of care for young people with mental health needs. Transition-related discontinuity of care is a major health, socioeconomic and societal challenge globally. The overall aim of the Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Health Care in Europe (MILESTONE) project (2014-19) is to improve transition from CAMHS to AMHS in diverse healthcare settings across Europe. MILESTONE focuses on current service provision in Europe, new transition-related measures, long term outcomes of young people leaving CAMHS, improving transitional care through 'managed transition', ethics of transitioning and the training of health care professionals. Methods: Data will be collected via systematic literature reviews, pan-European surveys, and focus groups with service providers, users and carers, and members of youth advocacy and mental health advocacy groups. A prospective cohort study will be conducted with a nested cluster randomised controlled trial in eight European Union (EU) countries (Belgium, Croatia, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, UK) involving over 1000 CAMHS users, their carers, and clinicians. Discussion: Improving transitional care can facilitate not only recovery but also mental health promotion and mental illness prevention for young people. MILESTONE will provide evidence of the organisational structures and processes influencing transition at the service interface across differing healthcare models in Europe and longitudinal outcomes for young people leaving CAMHS, solutions for improving transitional care in a cost-effective manner, training modules for clinicians, and commissioning and policy guidelines for service providers and policy makers.
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- 2018
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12. Iskustvo zlostavljanosti i depresija
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Štimac, D., Buljan Flander, G., Španić, A.M., Dodig-Ćurković, K., Boričević Maršanić, V., Tomac, A., and Franić, T.
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seksualno zlostavljanje ,djeca ,depresija - Abstract
Depresija i zlostavljanje djece u fokusu su društvenog interesa, što potvrđuje i značajan broj provedenih studija koje ispituju ulogu iskustva zlostavljanja u djetinjstvu u etiologiji depresije te potencijalnu povezanost različitih oblika zlostavljanosti i depresije. Cilj provedenog istraživanja je ispitati razlikuje li se izraženost depresivne simptomatologije kod djece ovisno o tipu zlostavljanja kojemu su bila izložena. Uzorak istraživanja činio je klinički uzorak zlostavljane djece i djece koja su svjedočila nasilju u obitelji uključene u obradu Poliklinike za zaštitu djece grada Zagreba (N=659). Od ukupnog broja djece, 49 je bilo fizički zlostavljano, 118 emocionalno zlostavljano, 176 seksualno zlostavljano te je 316 svjedočilo nasilju u obitelji. Rezultati su pokazali da je kod četvrtine ukupnog uzorka djece prisutna povišena depresivna simptomatologija, pritom je najveći postotak djece s povišenom depresivnosti prisutan kod seksualno zlostavljane djece. Najmanji postotak povišene depresivnosti prisutan je kod djece koja su svjedočila nasilju u obitelji u odnosu na druge vrste zlostavljanja. Dobiveni rezultati komentirat će se iz perspektive tretmanske mogućnosti i prevencije.
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- 2015
13. Metabolic syndrome and inflammation markers in patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder
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Davor Lasic, Bevanda, M., Bošnjak, N., Uglešić, B., Glavina, T., and Franić, T.
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Adult ,Male ,Metabolic Syndrome ,shizofrenija ,povratni depresivni poremećaj ,metabolički sindrom ,upalni markeri ,CRP ,PAI-1 ,Depressive Disorder ,Croatia ,Comorbidity ,Middle Aged ,schizophrenia - recurrent depressive disorder - metabolic syndrome - inflammation markers – CRP - PAI-1 ,C-Reactive Protein ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Recurrence ,Reference Values ,Case-Control Studies ,Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1 ,Humans ,Female ,Inflammation Mediators ,Aged - Abstract
Background: The high prevalence of metabolic syndrome in patients with psychiatric disorders, almost double the prevalence reported for the general population, is worrying. The aim of this study is to investigate the presence of metabolic syndrome and inflammatory marker levels in patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder in a Croatian psychiatric sample. Subjects and methods: This study included 62 inpatients with schizophrenia and 62 with recurrent depressive disorder treated at the Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Centre Split, enrolled from November 2011 until May 2012. The cases were compared to 124 healthy subjects from the general population. Results: The presence of metabolic syndrome was found in 56.5% of the patients with schizophrenia and 53.2% of the patients with depression, which was significantly more prevalent than in the control group (32.3%). The levels of inflammation markers (i.e., C-reactive protein and PAI-1) were significantly higher among patients with metabolic syndrome. Conclusions: Patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder demonstrate a high prevalence of metabolic syndrome that is also related to inflammation processes. In the context of integrative medicine, clinicians and researchers should consider psychiatric patients within a holistic approach.
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- 2014
14. Relationships Between Psychopathology and Quality of Life Among Adolescents a Structural Equation Modeling Approach
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Stevanović, D, Atilola, O, Singh Balhara, YP, Avicenna, M, Kandemir, H, Vostanis, P, Knez, R, Franić, T, Petrov, P, and Vlaskalić, Z.
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quality of life ,adolescents ,psychopathology ,humanities - Abstract
Purpose: One of the main characteristics of measuring quality of life (QOL) in psychopharmacology is in providing data about the impacts of specific treatments on different aspects of well-being and functioning [1]. Therefore, QOL and other similar patientreported outcome (PRO) measures are recognized by regulatory bodies as important outcome measures in clinical trials, drugs registration, and marketing processes as an important target for intervention. Nevertheless, the aspects of psychopathology and QOL are highly inter-correlated and no clear demarcations were made the concepts [2]. As a useful method for studying complex relationships between various constructs, structural equation modeling (SEM) has not received much attention to study psychopathology and QOL together. This study evaluated the relationships between aspects of QOL and mental health using a SEM approach among adolescents in an international sample. >Methods: In this study, adolescents from an international project participated [2]. Adolescents aged 14−18 years from Serbia, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, Bulgaria, Croatia, and Turkey completed the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) for QOL assessments and Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) for mental health difficulties. Assuming that the aspects of psychopathology and QOL could be highly inter- correlated due to similarities in items, the PedsQL items with similar meaning to the SDQ items measuring psychopathology were omitted. A SEM model was tested for this purpose: one latent QOL variable represented by three indicators − scales derived from the PedsQL (Physical functioning, Social functioning, and School functioning) and two correlated predictors − mental difficulties (derived from the SDQ scores indicating significant psychopathology) and chronic condition/illness (the presence/absence of a chronic health problem). The following statistics was used to assess the adequacy of the model: Tucker Lewis Index − TLI (>0.95 excellent), the Comparative Fit Index − CFI (>0.95 excellent), and Root Mean Square Error of Approximation − RMSEA (
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- 2013
15. Iskustvo zlostavljanosti i depresija
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Štimac, D., primary, Buljan Flander, G., additional, Profaca, B., additional, Španič, A., additional, Dodig-Čurković, M., additional, Boričević Maršinić, V., additional, Tomac, A., additional, and Franić, T., additional
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- 2015
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16. Primjena lijekova u liječenju depresije dječje i adolescentne dobi
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Dodig-Čurković, K., primary, Groznica Hržić, I., additional, Franić, T., additional, Boričević Maršanić, V., additional, Štimac, D., additional, Tomac, A., additional, Petak Erić, A., additional, Čurković, M., additional, and Paradžik, Lj., additional
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- 2015
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17. Povezanost depresije, vršnjačkog nasilja i fizičkih obračuna u ranoj adolescenciji
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Vojković, K., primary, Davidović, N., additional, Boričević Maršanić, V., additional, Dodig Čurković, K., additional, Tomac, A., additional, Štimac, D., additional, and Franić, T., additional
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- 2015
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18. Rana adolescencija, nenamjerne ozljede i depresivnost
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Perić, K., primary, Davidović, N., additional, Boričević Maršanić, V., additional, Dodig Čurković, K., additional, Tomac, A., additional, Paradžik, Lj., additional, and Franić, T., additional
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- 2015
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19. Dječja depresija ili o boli – što dijete boli
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Paradžik, Lj., primary, Boričević Maršanić, V., additional, Karapetrić Bolfan, Lj., additional, Šarić, D., additional, Franić, T., additional, and Štimac, D., additional
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- 2015
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20. Alcoholism of adolescents, Students ef the Final Classes of Primary Schools
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Dodig, G., Uglešić, B., Franić, T., Dedić, M., Lasić, D., and Šendula-Jengić, V.
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alcoholism ,younger adolescents ,attitudes - Abstract
The authors base their work on the fact that, in the last couple of years, drunk youngers adolescents can be most ever more frequently in the emergency rooms of psychiatric and internal medicine clinics. In this paper, they try to investigate the phenomenon of consumption of alcoholic drinks in the population of srudents of the final classes of primary school. Besides tha afcts mentioned above, the autors have tried to investigate that fact in correlationwith alcohol-drinking habits and its implications on success in school, as an indicator of already present disturbances, with grave consequences on psychological and social finctioning of alcoholic drinks consumers. The autors also investigate the attitudes of younger adolescents towards alcoholism, as a social-medical problem, and the attitudes towards the persons intoxicated with alcohol. The study results are very disturbing and suggest that much greater efforts ahould be given by medical and pedagogical services in prevention and treatment of alcoholism.
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- 2002
21. P.7.f.001 Relationships between psychopathology and quality of life among adolescents: a structural equation modeling approach
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Stevanovic, D., Atilola, O., Singh Balhara, Y.P., Avicenna, M., Kandemir, H., Vostanis, P., Knez, R., Franic, T., Petrov, P., and Vlaskalic, Z.
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- 2013
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22. Toxic epidermal necrolysis caused by flurazepam?
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Loncar C, Franić T, and Marijo Bilusic
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integumentary system ,Stevens-Johnson syndrome - toxic epidermal necrolysis - drug hypersensitivity -flurazepam - Abstract
Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis are rare, but severe cutaneous reactions. Beside cutaneous manifestations, the syndrome is characterised by constitutional sypmtoms with even lethal consequences. Toxic epidermal necrolysis is usually a drug-hypersensitivity syndrome. More than a hundred drugs were suspected to cause toxic epidermal necrolysis. Although benzodiazepines had been suspected in some cases, flurazepam has not been implicated thus far. The authors report a severe, life threatening case of toxic epidermal necrolysis in a young woman suffering from schizophrenia. The most probable cause was flurazepam, a hypnotic agent of the benzodiazepine class
23. Mentalization and psychopharmacotherapy in patients with personality and eating disorders
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Marčinko D, Nenad Jakšić, Skočić M, and Franić T
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psychopharmacotherapy ,mentalization ,personality disorder ,eating disorder ,suicidality ,psychoanalytic psychotherapy - Abstract
SUMMARY Contemporary psychiatry pays more and more attention to the patient’s capacity regarding acceptance of psychiatric drugs. Understanding the basis of our treatment’s effectiveness becomes more challenging. To understand psychiatric treatment psychiatrists must pay full attention to mentalizing and the conditions under which this basic human capacity becomes impaired especially in those suffering from personality and eating disorders. This paper discusses the meaning and clinical applications of the mentalizing related to psychopharmacotherapy for personality and eating disorders patients, including suicidality.
24. The importance of clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their mental health services in Europe
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Larissa S. van Bodegom, Suzanne E. Gerritsen, Gwendolyn C. Dieleman, Mathilde M. Overbeek, Giovanni de Girolamo, Paolo Scocco, Manon H.J. Hillegers, Dieter Wolke, Dimitris Rizopoulos, Rebecca Appleton, Patrizia Conti, Tomislav Franić, Francesco Margari, Jason Madan, Fiona McNicholas, Renata Nacinovich, Adriana Pastore, Moli Paul, Diane Purper-Ouakil, Melanie C. Saam, Paramala J. Santosh, Anne Sartor, Ulrike M.E. Schulze, Giulia Signorini, Swaran P. Singh, Cathy Street, Priya Tah, Elena Tanase, Sabine Tremmery, Helena Tuomainen, Athanasios Maras, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry / Psychology, Epidemiology, van Bodegom, L, Gerritsen, S, Dieleman, G, Overbeek, M, de Girolamo, G, Scocco, P, Hillegers, M, Wolke, D, Rizopoulos, D, Appleton, R, Conti, P, Franić, T, Margari, F, Madan, J, Mcnicholas, F, Nacinovich, R, Pastore, A, Paul, M, Purper-Ouakil, D, Saam, M, Santosh, P, Sartor, A, Schulze, U, Signorini, G, Singh, S, Street, C, Tah, P, Tanase, E, Tremmery, S, Tuomainen, H, Maras, A, Clinical Child and Family Studies, LEARN! - Child rearing, and APH - Mental Health
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Suicidal thought ,Suicidal thoughts ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Adolescent ,Mental health services ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,MED/39 - NEUROPSICHIATRIA INFANTILE ,Mental health service ,Transition to adult care - Abstract
Background: To study clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) and its association with mental health indicators, transition recommendations and mental health service (MHS) use. Methods: 763 CAMHS users from eight European countries were assessed using multi-informant and standardised assessment tools at baseline and nine months follow-up. Separate ANCOVA's and pairwise comparisons were conducted to assess whether clinicians' and parents' awareness of young people's suicidal behaviour were associated with mental health indicators, clinician's recommendations to continue treatment and MHS use at nine months follow-up. Results: 53.5 % of clinicians and 56.9 % of parents were unaware of young people's self-reported suicidal behaviour at baseline. Compared to those whose clinicians/parents were aware, unawareness was associated with a 72–80 % lower proportion of being recommended to continue treatment. Self-reported mental health problems at baseline were comparable for young people whose clinicians and parents were aware and unaware of suicidal behaviour. Clinicians' and parents' unawareness were not associated with MHS use at follow-up. Limitations: Aspects of suicidal behaviour, such as suicide ideation, -plans and -attempts, could not be distinguished. Few young people transitioned to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS), therefore power to study factors associated with AMHS use was limited. Conclusion: Clinicians and parents are often unaware of suicidal behaviour, which decreases the likelihood of a recommendation to continue treatment, but does not seem to affect young people's MHS use or their mental health problems.
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- 2023
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25. Adaptation and validation of the On Your Own Feet - Transition Experiences Scale evaluating transitions to adult services among adolescent mental health service users in Europe.
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Gerritsen SE, van Bodegom LS, Overbeek MM, van Staa A, Maras A, van Amelsvoort TA, Wolke D, de Girolamo G, Franić T, McNicholas F, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Santosh P, Schulze UM, Singh SP, Street C, Tremmery S, Tuomainen H, and Dieleman GC
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Male, Female, Europe, Parents psychology, Young Adult, Adult, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent Health Services standards, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Child, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Disorders psychology, Mental Health Services, Transition to Adult Care standards, Psychometrics standards, Psychometrics instrumentation
- Abstract
Purpose: Experiences of young people transitioning from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) have mostly been investigated qualitatively. This study adapts and validates the On Your Own Feet - Transition Experiences Scale (OYOF-TES) in a sample of CAMHS users in Europe and describes young people's and parents' experiences with transition and end of care at CAMHS., Methods: The OYOF-TES was adapted to a mental health setting and translated. An End Of Care (OYOF-EOC) version (self- and parent-report) was developed. A total of 457 young people and 383 parents completed an OYOF-TES or OYOF-EOC. Psychometric properties and descriptives are presented., Results: The Cronbach's alphas of the OYOF-TES and OYOF-EOC parent/self-report ranged from 0.92 to 0.94. The two-factor structure was confirmed. The mean overall satisfaction reported by young people was 6.15 (0-10; SD=2.92) for transition and 7.14 (0-10; SD=2.37) for care ending. However, 26.7%-36.4% of young people were unsatisfied., Discussion: The OYOF-TES and OYOF-EOC can be used reliably in mental healthcare settings to capture young people's and parents' transition experiences. The majority of young people and parents was satisfied with the process of transition and care ending, yet a third of young people had negative experiences., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. The Association Between Trajectories of Self-reported Psychotic Experiences and Continuity of Mental Health Care in a Longitudinal Cohort of Adolescents and Young Adults.
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Gerritsen SE, Bolhuis K, van Bodegom LS, Maras A, Overbeek MM, van Amelsvoort TAMJ, Wolke D, de Girolamo G, Franić T, Madan J, McNicholas F, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Santosh P, Schulze UME, Singh SP, Street C, Tremmery S, Tuomainen H, Dieleman GC, and Mesman E
- 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., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center.)
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- 2024
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27. Turning 18 in mental health services: a multicountry qualitative study of service user experiences and views.
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Boonstra A, Leijdesdorff S, Street C, Holme I, van Bodegom L, Franić T, Appleton R, Tah P, Tuomainen H, Tomljenovic H, McNicholas F, and van Amelsvoort T
- Abstract
Background: Worldwide, the division between Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) has frequently resulted in fragmented care with an unprepared, non-gradual transition. To improve continuity of care and other service transition experiences, service user input is essential. However, such previous qualitative studies are from a decade ago or focused on one mental disorder or country. The aim of the present study was to learn from service users' transition experiences and suggested improvements., Methods: Semi-structured interviews were held with young people aged 18-24 and/or parents/caregivers in the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands and Croatia. Inclusion was based on the experience of specialist mental health care before and after turning 18. Thematic analysis of transcribed and translated interview transcripts was performed using ATLAS.ti 9., Results: Main themes of service user experiences included abrupt changes in responsibilities, various barriers and a lack of preparation, communication and ongoing care. Young people expressed a great need for continuity of care. Their suggestions to improve transitional care included early and adequate preparation, joint working, improved communication from and between services, overlapping services, staying at CAMHS for longer and designated youth mental health teams., Conclusions: Young people who experienced care before and after turning 18 suggested either altering the age limits of services or ensuring early preparation and communication regarding the transition and finding AHMS. This communication should include general changes when turning 18. Further considerations include increasing collaboration and overlap between CAMHS and AMHS.
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- 2024
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28. Predictors of transitioning to adult mental health services and associated costs: a cross-country comparison.
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Appleton R, Canaway A, Tuomainen H, Dieleman G, Gerritsen S, Overbeek M, Maras A, van Bodegom L, Franić T, de Girolamo G, Madan J, McNicholas F, Purper-Ouakil D, Schulze UME, Tremmery S, and Singh SP
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- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Mental Health Services, Transition to Adult Care
- Abstract
Background: Young people are at risk of falling through the care gap after leaving child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) despite an ongoing need for mental health support. Currently, little is known about the predictors of transitioning to adult mental health services (AMHS), and associated healthcare and societal costs as young people cross the transition boundary., Objective: To conduct a secondary data analysis exploring predictors of transitioning or falling through the gap and associated costs., Methods: Data were used from a longitudinal study, which followed young people from seven European countries for 2 years after reaching their CAMHS boundary. Predictors of transitioning (including sociodemographic and clinical variables) and longitudinal resource use were compared for 488 young people who transitioned to AMHS versus those who fell through the gap., Findings: Young people were more likely to transition to AMHS if they were severely ill. Those from Italy, the Netherlands and the UK were more likely to fall through the gap than transition to AMHS. Healthcare costs fell for all young people over the study, with a sharper decrease for those who fell through the gap., Conclusions: Total healthcare costs fell for all participants, indicating that the intensity of mental health support reduces for all young people as they cross the CAMHS boundary, regardless of clinical need., Clinical Implications: It is important that alternative forms of mental health support are available for young people who do not meet the AMHS care threshold but still have mental health needs after leaving CAMHS., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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29. Healthcare costs for young people transitioning the boundary between child/adolescent and adult mental health services in seven European countries: results from the MILESTONE study.
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Canaway A, Appleton R, van Bodegom L, Dieleman G, Franić T, Gerritsen S, de Girolamo G, Maras A, McNicholas F, Overbeek M, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Santosh P, Schulze U, Singh SP, Street C, Tah P, Tremmery B, Tuomainen H, Verhulst FC, Wolke D, and Madan J
- Abstract
Background: The boundary between services for children and adolescents and adults has been identified as problematic for young people with mental health problems., Aims: To examine the use and cost of healthcare for young people engaged in mental healthcare before and after the child/adolescent and adult service boundary., Method: Data from 772 young people in seven European countries participating in the MILESTONE trial were analysed. We analysed and costed healthcare resources used in the 6-month period before and after the service boundary., Results: The proportion of young people engaging with healthcare services fell substantially after crossing the service boundary (associated costs €7761 pre-boundary v. €3376 post-boundary). Pre-boundary, the main cost driver was in-patient care (approximately 50%), whereas post-boundary costs were more evenly spread between services; cost reductions were correlated with pre-boundary in-patient care. Severity was associated with substantially higher costs pre- and post-boundary, and those who were engaged specifically with mental health services after the service boundary accrued the greatest healthcare costs post-service boundary., Conclusions: Costs of healthcare are large in this population, but fall considerably after transition, particularly for those who were most severely ill. In part, this is likely to reflect improvement in the mental health of young people. However, qualitative evidence from the MILESTONE study suggests that lack of capacity in adult services and young people's disengagement with formal mental health services post-transition are contributing factors. Long-term data are needed to assess the adverse long-term effects on costs and health of this unmet need and disengagement.
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- 2023
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30. Effect of managed transition on mental health outcomes for young people at the child-adult mental health service boundary: a randomised clinical trial.
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Singh SP, Tuomainen H, Bouliotis G, Canaway A, De Girolamo G, Dieleman GC, Franić T, Madan J, Maras A, McNicholas F, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Santosh P, Schulze UME, Street C, Tremmery S, Verhulst FC, Wells P, Wolke D, and Warwick J
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- Adolescent, Humans, Adult, Mental Health, Europe, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Mental Health Services, Psychotic Disorders
- Abstract
Background: Poor transition planning contributes to discontinuity of care at the child-adult mental health service boundary (SB), adversely affecting mental health outcomes in young people (YP). The aim of the study was to determine whether managed transition (MT) improves mental health outcomes of YP reaching the child/adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) boundary compared with usual care (UC)., Methods: A two-arm cluster-randomised trial (ISRCTN83240263 and NCT03013595) with clusters allocated 1:2 between MT and UC. Recruitment took place in 40 CAMHS (eight European countries) between October 2015 and December 2016. Eligible participants were CAMHS service users who were receiving treatment or had a diagnosed mental disorder, had an IQ ⩾ 70 and were within 1 year of reaching the SB. MT was a multi-component intervention that included CAMHS training, systematic identification of YP approaching SB, a structured assessment (Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure) and sharing of information between CAMHS and adult mental health services. The primary outcome was HoNOSCA (Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents) score 15-months post-entry to the trial., Results: The mean difference in HoNOSCA scores between the MT and UC arms at 15 months was -1.11 points (95% confidence interval -2.07 to -0.14, p = 0.03). The cost of delivering the intervention was relatively modest (€17-€65 per service user)., Conclusions: MT led to improved mental health of YP after the SB but the magnitude of the effect was small. The intervention can be implemented at low cost and form part of planned and purposeful transitional care.
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- 2023
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31. The importance of clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their mental health services in Europe.
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van Bodegom LS, Gerritsen SE, Dieleman GC, Overbeek MM, de Girolamo G, Scocco P, Hillegers MHJ, Wolke D, Rizopoulos D, Appleton R, Conti P, Franić T, Margari F, Madan J, McNicholas F, Nacinovich R, Pastore A, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Saam MC, Santosh PJ, Sartor A, Schulze UME, Signorini G, Singh SP, Street C, Tah P, Tanase E, Tremmery S, Tuomainen H, and Maras A
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Adolescent, Europe, Mental Health, Parents psychology, Suicidal Ideation, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Background: To study clinicians' and parents' awareness of suicidal behaviour in adolescents reaching the upper age limit of their Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) and its association with mental health indicators, transition recommendations and mental health service (MHS) use., Methods: 763 CAMHS users from eight European countries were assessed using multi-informant and standardised assessment tools at baseline and nine months follow-up. Separate ANCOVA's and pairwise comparisons were conducted to assess whether clinicians' and parents' awareness of young people's suicidal behaviour were associated with mental health indicators, clinician's recommendations to continue treatment and MHS use at nine months follow-up., Results: 53.5 % of clinicians and 56.9 % of parents were unaware of young people's self-reported suicidal behaviour at baseline. Compared to those whose clinicians/parents were aware, unawareness was associated with a 72-80 % lower proportion of being recommended to continue treatment. Self-reported mental health problems at baseline were comparable for young people whose clinicians and parents were aware and unaware of suicidal behaviour. Clinicians' and parents' unawareness were not associated with MHS use at follow-up., Limitations: Aspects of suicidal behaviour, such as suicide ideation, -plans and -attempts, could not be distinguished. Few young people transitioned to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS), therefore power to study factors associated with AMHS use was limited., Conclusion: Clinicians and parents are often unaware of suicidal behaviour, which decreases the likelihood of a recommendation to continue treatment, but does not seem to affect young people's MHS use or their mental health problems., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest SPS is part-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care West Midlands (NIHR CLAHRC WM), now recommissioned as NIHR Applied Research Collaboration West Midlands. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. PS is the co-inventor of the HealthTrackerTM and is the Chief Executive Officer and shareholder in HealthTracker Ltd. AM was a speaker and advisor for Neurim, Shire, Infectopharm and Lilly (all not related to transition research)., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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32. Leaving child and adolescent mental health services in the MILESTONE cohort: a longitudinal cohort study on young people's mental health indicators, care pathways, and outcomes in Europe.
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Gerritsen SE, van Bodegom LS, Overbeek MM, Maras A, Verhulst FC, Wolke D, Rizopoulos D, de Girolamo G, Franić T, Madan J, McNicholas F, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Santosh PJ, Schulze UME, Singh SP, Street C, Tremmery S, Tuomainen H, and Dieleman GC
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Child, Adult, Male, Female, Young Adult, Infant, Longitudinal Studies, Critical Pathways, Cohort Studies, Europe epidemiology, Mental Health, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Background: The configuration of having separate mental health services by age, namely child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) and adult mental health services (AMHS), might be a barrier to continuity of care that adversely affects young people's mental health. However, no studies have investigated whether discontinuity of care in the transition period affects mental health. We aimed to discern the type of care young people receive after reaching the upper age limit of their CAMHS and examine differences in outcomes at 24-month follow-up between young people receiving different types of care., Methods: To assess mental health in young people from 39 CAMHS in eight European countries (Belgium, Croatia, France, Germany, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, and the UK), we did a longitudinal cohort study. Eligible young people were CAMHS users up to 1 year younger than the upper age limit of their CAMHS or up to 3 months older, if they were still in CAMHS. Information on mental health service use, mental health problems (ie, using the Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents, Youth Self-Report and Adult Self-Report, DSM-5, and ICD-10), and sociodemographic characteristics were collected using self-reported, parent-reported, and clinician-reported interviews and questionnaires. Mixed models were applied to assess relationships between baseline characteristics, mental health service use, and outcomes., Findings: The MILESTONE cohort included 763 young people. The participants were 60·0% female (n=458) and 40·0% male (n=305), 90·3% White (n=578), and had a mean age of 17·5 years (range 15·2-19·6 years). Over the 24-month follow-up period, 48 young people (6·3%) actively withdrew from the study. For young people, the higher their scores on the Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents (p=0·0009) and Youth Self-Report and Adult Self-Report (p=0·046), and who had a clinical classification of severe mental illness (p=0·0033), had suicidal thoughts or behaviours or self-harm (p=0·034), used psychotropic medication (p=0·0014), and had a self-reported or parent-reported need for continued treatment (p<0·0001) at baseline, were more likely to transition to AMHS or stay in CAMHS than to have care end. Overall, over the 24-month follow-up period, the mental health of young people improved, but 24·4% of young people reported an increase in problems calculated using the reliable change index, of whom 5·3% had a clinically relevant increase in problems. At 24-month follow-up, no differences in change in mental health problems since baseline were found between young people who used different types of care (CAMHS, AMHS, or no care)., Interpretation: Although approximately half of young people reaching the upper age limit of their CAMHS stop using mental health services, this was not associated with a deterioration in their mental health. Young people with the most severe mental health problems are more likely to receive continued care. If replicated, our findings suggest investments in improving transitional care for all CAMHS users might not be cost-effective in times of rising health-care costs, but might be better targeted at a subgroup of young people with increasing mental health problems who do not receive continued treatment., Funding: European Commission's 7th Framework Programme., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests SPS was part funded by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care West Midlands, now recommissioned as the National Institute for Health Research Applied Research Collaboration West Midlands. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Institute for Health Research or the Department of Health and Social Care. PJS is the co-inventor of the HealthTracker, and is the Chief Executive Officer and shareholder in HealthTracker; and has received funding for clinical trials on Rett syndrome from Anavex Scientific, GW Pharma, and Newron Pharma, outside the submitted work. FCV publishes the Dutch translations of Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment, from which he receives remuneration. AM was a speaker and advisor for Infectopharm, Lilly, Neurim, and Shire, outside the submitted work., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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33. Registry versus publication: discrepancy of primary outcomes and possible outcome reporting bias in child and adolescent mental health.
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Vrljičak Davidović N, Komić L, Mešin I, Kotarac M, Okmažić D, and Franić T
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Publication Bias, Registries, Mental Health
- Abstract
Outcome reporting bias is one of the fundamental forms of publication bias. It implies publishing only outcomes that have positive results. The aim of this observational study was to explore primary outcome discrepancies between registry of clinical trials and their corresponding publications, since these can indicate outcome reporting bias in child mental health. Data were extracted from completed interventional clinical trials from ClinicalTrial.gov registry and its Archive site. Trials were registered under "Behaviours and Mental Disorders" category, and conducted on underage participants (0-17 years). Their primary outcomes were compared to those published in publication which had a corresponding NCT number stated in the text. Sixteen percent of trials did not have the minimum information on primary outcome stated in the registry-neither the measure used nor the measurement time points; 38.9% of trials had the minimum information stated to describe primary outcome, while only 3.3% of trials had all the necessary elements stated in the registry. Most of the publication in our sample had positive results (66.4%). Half of the trials registered before completion had non-matching primary outcomes in the registry and publication; 85.4% of trials with non-matching outcomes indicated possible outcome reporting bias for some of the primary outcome. Middle-sized trials and industry-funded trials were related with higher quality of primary outcome registration. Industry funding was related with positive findings in publication. Non-industry funding proved to be the only significant predictor of discrepancy between registered and published primary outcomes, and possible outcome reporting bias. Journal impact factor was not related with any of the outcome measures. The main limitation of the study is that it primarily offers an insight into discrepancy of registered and published outcomes. The methodology does not imply an access to results of unpublished outcomes - therefore, it was not possible to determine the presence of the bias with sufficient certainty in large number of trials. Further research should be done with improved methodology and additional data., (© 2021. Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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34. Cohort profile: demographic and clinical characteristics of the MILESTONE longitudinal cohort of young people approaching the upper age limit of their child mental health care service in Europe.
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Gerritsen SE, Maras A, van Bodegom LS, Overbeek MM, Verhulst FC, Wolke D, Appleton R, Bertani A, Cataldo MG, Conti P, Da Fonseca D, Davidović N, Dodig-Ćurković K, Ferrari C, Fiori F, Franić T, Gatherer C, De Girolamo G, Heaney N, Hendrickx G, Kolozsvari A, Levi FM, Lievesley K, Madan J, Martinelli O, Mastroianni M, Maurice V, McNicholas F, O'Hara L, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, de Roeck V, Russet F, Saam MC, Sagar-Ouriaghli I, Santosh PJ, Sartor A, Schandrin A, Schulze UME, Signorini G, Singh SP, Singh J, Street C, Tah P, Tanase E, Tremmery S, Tuffrey A, Tuomainen H, van Amelsvoort TAMJ, Wilson A, Walker L, and Dieleman GC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Demography, Europe, Humans, Mental Health, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Adolescent Health Services, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Purpose: The presence of distinct child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) and adult mental health services (AMHS) impacts continuity of mental health treatment for young people. However, we do not know the extent of discontinuity of care in Europe nor the effects of discontinuity on the mental health of young people. Current research is limited, as the majority of existing studies are retrospective, based on small samples or used non-standardised information from medical records. The MILESTONE prospective cohort study aims to examine associations between service use, mental health and other outcomes over 24 months, using information from self, parent and clinician reports., Participants: Seven hundred sixty-three young people from 39 CAMHS in 8 European countries, their parents and CAMHS clinicians who completed interviews and online questionnaires and were followed up for 2 years after reaching the upper age limit of the CAMHS they receive treatment at., Findings to Date: This cohort profile describes the baseline characteristics of the MILESTONE cohort. The mental health of young people reaching the upper age limit of their CAMHS varied greatly in type and severity: 32.8% of young people reported clinical levels of self-reported problems and 18.6% were rated to be 'markedly ill', 'severely ill' or 'among the most extremely ill' by their clinician. Fifty-seven per cent of young people reported psychotropic medication use in the previous half year., Future Plans: Analysis of longitudinal data from the MILESTONE cohort will be used to assess relationships between the demographic and clinical characteristics of young people reaching the upper age limit of their CAMHS and the type of care the young person uses over the next 2 years, such as whether the young person transitions to AMHS. At 2 years follow-up, the mental health outcomes of young people following different care pathways will be compared., Trial Registration Number: NCT03013595., Competing Interests: Competing interests: SPS is part-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care West Midlands (NIHR CLAHRC WM), now recommissioned as NIHR Applied Research Collaboration West Midlands. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. PS is the co-inventor of the HealthTrackerTM and is the Chief Executive Officer and shareholder in HealthTracker Ltd. FF is a Chief Technical Officer and AK is the Chief Finance Officer employed by HealthTracker Ltd respectively. FCV publishes the Dutch translations of ASEBA, from which he receives remuneration. AM was a speaker and advisor for Neurim, Shire, Infectopharm and Lilly (all not related to transition research)., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Validation of the Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM) for the Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Healthcare in Europe (MILESTONE) study.
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Santosh P, Singh J, Adams L, Mastroianni M, Heaney N, Lievesley K, Sagar-Ouriaghli I, Allibrio G, Appleton R, Davidović N, de Girolamo G, Dieleman G, Dodig-Ćurković K, Franić T, Gatherer C, Gerritsen S, Gheza E, Madan J, Manenti L, Maras A, Margari F, McNicholas F, Pastore A, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Rinaldi F, Sakar V, Schulze U, Signorini G, Street C, Tah P, Tremmery S, Tuffrey A, Tuomainen H, Verhulst F, Warwick J, Wilson A, Wolke D, Fiori F, and Singh S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Europe, Female, Health Services Research, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Mental Health Services, Transition to Adult Care
- Abstract
Objective: Young people moving from child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) to adult mental health services (AMHS) are faced with significant challenges. To improve this state of affairs, there needs to be a recognition of the problem and initiatives and an urgent requirement for appropriate tools for measuring readiness and outcomes at the transfer boundary (16-18 years of age in Europe). The objective of this study was to develop and validate the Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM) for assessing a young person's readiness for transition, and their outcomes at the transfer boundary., Design: MILESTONE prospective study., Setting: Eight European Union (EU) countries participating in the EU-funded MILESTONE study., Participants: The first phase (MILESTONE validation study) involved 100 adolescents (pre-transition), young adults (post-transition), parents/carers and both CAMHS and AMHS clinicians. The second phase (MILESTONE cohort study and nested cluster randomised trial) involved over 1000 young people., Results: The development of the TRAM began with a literature review on transitioning and a review of important items regarding transition by a panel of 34 mental health experts. A list of 64 items of potential importance were identified, which together comprised the TRAM. The psychometric properties of the different versions of the TRAM were evaluated and showed that the TRAM had good reliability for all versions and low-to-moderate correlations when compared with other established instruments and a well-defined factor structure. The main results of the cohort study with the nested cluster randomised trial are not reported., Conclusion: The TRAM is a reliable instrument for assessing transition readiness and appropriateness. It highlighted the barriers to a successful transition and informed clinicians, identifying areas which clinicians on both sides of the transfer boundary can work on to ease the transition for the young person., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN83240263 (Registered 23 July 2015), NCT03013595 (Registered 6 January 2017); Pre-results., Competing Interests: Competing interests: PS is the co-inventor of the HealthTracker and is the Chief Executive Officer and shareholder in HealthTracker. FF is a Chief Technical Officer and KL is a Project Manager employed by HealthTracker. FV is the Dutch distributor of ASEBA from which he receives remuneration. SPS is part-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care WM (NIHR CLAHRC WM)., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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36. Low dissemination rates, non-transparency of trial premature cessation and late registration in child mental health: observational study of registered interventional trials.
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Vrljičak Davidović N, Tokalić R, Burilović E, Pejdo S, Marušić A, Singh S, and Franić T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Registries, Research Design, Retrospective Studies, Mental Health standards
- Abstract
The aim of this observational study was to explore trial premature cessation, non-publication and trial registration time in child mental health. Data were extracted for "closed" trials in Clinicaltrials.gov registry and European Union Clinical Trial Register (EUCTR) and corresponding publications of completed trials indexed in three data bases (PubMed, Scopus and Google Scholar). We restricted the extraction to the 'Behaviours and Mental Disorders' category and participants' age of 0-17 years. Outcome measures were trial completion, results reporting within a year after the trial completion, publishing an article in a peer-reviewed journal within an average time to publish (729 days), and registration time. The number of EUCTR trials was relatively small (n = 35) and with many inconsistencies. Out of 827 "closed" trials extracted from ClinicalTrials.gov, 69% were completed, 24.2% of prematurely ceased trials did not report reasons for early termination, 12.2% of the completed trials had results reported within a year, and 29.3% had an article published within 24 months after completion. Middle-sized (100-499 participants) and behavioural trials had higher chances of being successfully completed. Middle-sized and industry-funded trials were associated with results reporting. Chances for publishing an article were lower for industry-funded trials. Industry funding and drug interventions were related to timely registration. Large sample and non-industry funding were related to retrospective registration, which was recorded more often in recent years than before (we observed trials registered from 2002 until 2017). This study found low dissemination rates in the field of child mental health, with worrying under-reporting of premature termination causes. These findings indicate that more children are being subjected to unnecessary risk that comes with trial participation.
- Published
- 2020
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37. Protocol for the development and validation procedure of the managing the link and strengthening transition from child to adult mental health care (MILESTONE) suite of measures.
- Author
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Santosh P, Adams L, Fiori F, Davidović N, de Girolamo G, Dieleman GC, Franić T, Heaney N, Lievesley K, Madan J, Maras A, Mastroianni M, McNicholas F, Paul M, Purper-Ouakil D, Sagar-Ouriaghli I, Schulze U, Signorini G, Street C, Tah P, Tremmery S, Tuomainen H, Verhulst FC, Warwick J, Wolke D, Singh J, and Singh SP
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Cohort Studies, Europe, Humans, Mental Health, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Reproducibility of Results, Adolescent Health Services, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services, Transition to Adult Care
- Abstract
Background: Mental health disorders in the child and adolescent population are a pressing public health concern. Despite the high prevalence of psychopathology in this vulnerable population, the transition from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to Adult Mental Health Services (AMHS) has many obstacles such as deficiencies in planning, organisational readiness and policy gaps. All these factors contribute to an inadequate and suboptimal transition process. A suite of measures is required that would allow young people to be assessed in a structured and standardised way to determine the on-going need for care and to improve communication across clinicians at CAMHS and AMHS. This will have the potential to reduce the overall health economic burden and could also improve the quality of life for patients travelling across the transition boundary. The MILESTONE (Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Health Care) project aims to address the significant socioeconomic and societal challenge related to the transition process. This protocol paper describes the development of two MILESTONE transition-related measures: The Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure (TRAM), designed to be a decision-making aide for clinicians, and the Transition Related Outcome Measure (TROM), for examining the outcome of transition., Methods: The TRAM and TROM have been developed and were validated following the US FDA Guidance for Patient-reported Outcome Measures which follows an incremental stepwise framework. The study gathers information from service users, parents, families and mental health care professionals who have experience working with young people undergoing the transition process from eight European countries., Discussion: There is an urgent need for comprehensive measures that can assess transition across the CAMHS/AMHS boundary. This study protocol describes the process of development of two new transition measures: the TRAM and TROM. The TRAM has the potential to nurture better transitions as the findings can be summarised and provided to clinicians as a clinician-decision making support tool for identifying cases who need to transition and the TROM can be used to examine the outcomes of the transition process., Trial Registration: MILESTONE study registration: ISRCTN83240263 Registered 23-July-2015 - ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03013595 Registered 6 January 2017.
- Published
- 2020
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38. Looking Forward to the New Medical School in Croatia.
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Franić T
- Subjects
- Croatia, Humans, Education, Medical, Schools, Medical
- Published
- 2018
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39. Medication accessibility after diagnosis of ADHD in Croatia.
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Franić T and Ćurković KD
- Subjects
- Croatia, Humans, Registries, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity, Central Nervous System Stimulants
- Published
- 2018
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40. Protocol for a cohort study of adolescent mental health service users with a nested cluster randomised controlled trial to assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness of managed transition in improving transitions from child to adult mental health services (the MILESTONE study).
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Singh SP, Tuomainen H, Girolamo G, Maras A, Santosh P, McNicholas F, Schulze U, Purper-Ouakil D, Tremmery S, Franić T, Madan J, Paul M, Verhulst FC, Dieleman GC, Warwick J, Wolke D, Street C, Daffern C, Tah P, Griffin J, Canaway A, Signorini G, Gerritsen S, Adams L, O'Hara L, Aslan S, Russet F, Davidović N, Tuffrey A, Wilson A, Gatherer C, and Walker L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Health Services economics, Cohort Studies, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Health Services economics, Parents, Quality of Life, Research Design, Surveys and Questionnaires, Transition to Adult Care economics, Adolescent Health Services standards, Mental Health Services standards, Transition to Adult Care standards
- Abstract
Introduction: Disruption of care during transition from child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) to adult mental health services may adversely affect the health and well-being of service users. The MILESTONE (Managing the Link and Strengthening Transition from Child to Adult Mental Healthcare) study evaluates the longitudinal course and outcomes of adolescents approaching the transition boundary (TB) of their CAMHS and determines the effectiveness of the model of managed transition in improving outcomes, compared with usual care., Methods and Analysis: This is a cohort study with a nested cluster randomised controlled trial. Recruited CAMHS have been randomised to provide either (1) managed transition using the Transition Readiness and Appropriateness Measure score summary as a decision aid, or (2) usual care for young people reaching the TB. Participants are young people within 1 year of reaching the TB of their CAMHS in eight European countries; one parent/carer and a CAMHS clinician for each recruited young person; and adult mental health clinician or other community-based care provider, if young person transitions. The primary outcome is Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Children and Adolescents (HoNOSCA) measuring health and social functioning at 15 months postintervention. The secondary outcomes include mental health, quality of life, transition experience and healthcare usage assessed at 9, 15 and 24 months postintervention. With a mean cluster size of 21, a total of 840 participants randomised in a 1:2 intervention to control are required, providing 89% power to detect a difference in HoNOSCA score of 0.30 SD. The addition of 210 recruits for the cohort study ensures sufficient power for studying predictors, resulting in 1050 participants and an approximate 1:3 randomisation., Ethics and Dissemination: The study protocol was approved by the UK National Research Ethics Service (15/WM/0052) and equivalent ethics boards in participating countries. Results will be reported at conferences, in peer-reviewed publications and to all relevant stakeholder groups., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN83240263; NCT03013595 (pre-results)., Competing Interests: Competing interests: PS is the director and shareholder of HealthTracker. FCV publishes the Dutch translations of ASEBA, from which he receives remuneration., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
- Published
- 2017
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41. Mental health issues of refugee children: lessons from Croatia.
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Maršanić VB, Franić T, and Ćurković KD
- Published
- 2017
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42. Erratum to: Mental health issues of refugee children: lessons from Croatia.
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Maršanić VB, Franić T, and Ćurković KD
- Published
- 2017
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43. Metabolic syndrome and inflammation markers in patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder.
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Lasić D, Bevanda M, Bošnjak N, Uglešić B, Glavina T, and Franić T
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Comorbidity, Croatia, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Reference Values, C-Reactive Protein metabolism, Depressive Disorder epidemiology, Depressive Disorder physiopathology, Inflammation Mediators blood, Metabolic Syndrome epidemiology, Metabolic Syndrome physiopathology, Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1 blood
- Abstract
Background: The high prevalence of metabolic syndrome in patients with psychiatric disorders, almost double the prevalence reported for the general population, is worrying. The aim of this study is to investigate the presence of metabolic syndrome and inflammatory marker levels in patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder in a Croatian psychiatric sample., Subjects and Methods: This study included 62 inpatients with schizophrenia and 62 with recurrent depressive disorder treated at the Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital Centre Split, enrolled from November 2011 until May 2012. The cases were compared to 124 healthy subjects from the general population., Results: The presence of metabolic syndrome was found in 56.5% of the patients with schizophrenia and 53.2% of the patients with depression, which was significantly more prevalent than in the control group (32.3%). The levels of inflammation markers (i.e., C-reactive protein and PAI-1) were significantly higher among patients with metabolic syndrome., Conclusions: Patients with schizophrenia and recurrent depressive disorder demonstrate a high prevalence of metabolic syndrome that is also related to inflammation processes. In the context of integrative medicine, clinicians and researchers should consider psychiatric patients within a holistic approach.
- Published
- 2014
44. Suicidal ideations and sleep-related problems in early adolescence.
- Author
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Franić T, Kralj Z, Marčinko D, Knez R, and Kardum G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Croatia epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders epidemiology, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders psychology, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Aims: Suicidal ideation and sleep-related problems are associated with many common psychopathological entities in early adolescence. This study examined possible association between suicidal ideation and sleep-related problems., Methods: A cross-sectional study was performed in classroom settings at 840 early adolescents 11-13 years of age. Of those, 791 adolescents fully completed the data and thus represent an actual sample. Suicidal ideations were assessed with three dichotomous (yes/no) items: 'I often think about death'; 'I wish I was dead'; 'I often think about suicide.' A composite measure of perceived sleep-related problems was formed by combining items from the Junior Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (Do you find it hard to sleep at night because you are worrying about things?), Children Depression Inventory (It is hard for me to fall asleep at night), and two additional dichotomous questions (I often was not able to fall asleep because of worrying; At times I was not able to stay asleep because of worrying). This score mainly assessed difficulties in initiating or maintaining sleep., Results: A total of 7.1% adolescents reported suicidal ideation and 86.7% of them had sleep problems. Sleep-related problems were associated with any suicidal ideation and each type of ideation separately., Conclusion: This study suggests association of sleep problems and suicidal ideations in early adolescence. Therefore, clinicians should evaluate this population for sleep disturbances, as they might be a marker of increased risk for suicidality., (© 2013 Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.)
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- 2014
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45. Pathological narcissism and depressive symptoms in psychiatric outpatients: mediating role of dysfunctional attitudes.
- Author
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Marčinko D, Jakšić N, Ivezić E, Skočić M, Surányi Z, Lončar M, Franić T, and Jakovljević M
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outpatients, Personality Disorders classification, Attitude, Depression physiopathology, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Narcissism, Personality Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the relationships between pathological narcissism (narcissistic grandiosity and narcissistic vulnerability), dysfunctional attitudes (perfectionism and dependency on other people), and depressive symptoms in psychiatric outpatients., Method: A sample of 234 adult psychiatric outpatients (57.3% male; mean age 44.39 years) completed the Pathological Narcissism Inventory, the Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale-Form A, and the Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales-21., Results: Narcissistic vulnerability exhibited unique positive correlations with depressive symptoms, whereas narcissistic grandiosity showed substantially weaker correlations with depressive symptoms. Perfectionism partially mediated the relationship between narcissistic vulnerability and depressive symptoms. The mediating role of dependency was not confirmed., Conclusions: Among adult psychiatric outpatients, narcissistic vulnerability is more strongly related to depressive symptoms than narcissistic grandiosity, and dysfunctional perfectionism represents one of the underlying mechanisms of this relationship. The implications of these findings are discussed in relation to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders diagnostic criteria and the treatment of pathological narcissism., (© 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
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46. Mixed dissociative states in a combat PTSD patient triggered by re-traumatisation 15 years after the traumatic war experience - case report.
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Franić T, Munjiza J, Klarić M, and Britvić D
- Published
- 2014
47. Mentalization and psychopharmacotherapy in patients with personality and eating disorders.
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Marčinko D, Jakšić N, Skočić M, and Franić T
- Subjects
- Feeding and Eating Disorders drug therapy, Humans, Personality Disorders drug therapy, Suicide Prevention, Feeding and Eating Disorders therapy, Personality Disorders therapy, Psychoanalytic Therapy standards, Suicide psychology, Theory of Mind physiology
- Abstract
Contemporary psychiatry pays more and more attention to the patient's capacity regarding acceptance of psychiatric drugs. Understanding the basis of our treatment's effectiveness becomes more challenging. To understand psychiatric treatment psychiatrists must pay full attention to mentalizing and the conditions under which this basic human capacity becomes impaired especially in those suffering from personality and eating disorders. This paper discusses the meaning and clinical applications of the mentalizing related to psychopharmacotherapy for personality and eating disorders patients, including suicidality.
- Published
- 2013
48. Quetiapine in management of manic symptoms in patient with heart transplantation: a case report.
- Author
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Franić T, Kero T, Katić J, Marčinko D, and Bilušić M
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Male, Quetiapine Fumarate, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Bipolar Disorder drug therapy, Dibenzothiazepines therapeutic use, Heart Transplantation
- Published
- 2012
49. Parental involvement in the war in Croatia 1991-1995 and suicidality in Croatian male adolescents.
- Author
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Franić T, Kardum G, Marin Prižmić I, Pavletić N, and Marčinko D
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Confidence Intervals, Croatia epidemiology, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Parents psychology, Predictive Value of Tests, Psychometrics, Self Report, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Time Factors, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Aim: To investigate the association between parental war involvement and different indicators of psychosocial distress in a community sample of early adolescents ten years after the war in Croatia 1991-1995., Methods: A total of 695 adolescents were screened with a self-report questionnaire assessing parental war involvement, sociodemographic characteristics, and alcohol and drug consumption. Personality traits were assessed with the Junior Eysenck Personality Questionnaire; depressive symptoms with the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI); and unintentional injuries, physical fighting, and bullying with the World Health Organization survey Health Behavior in School-aged Children. Suicidal ideation was assessed with three dichotomous items. Suicidal attempts were assessed with one dichotomous item., Results: Out of 348 boys and 347 girls who were included in the analysis, 57.7% had at least one veteran parent. Male children of war veterans had higher rates of unintentional injuries (odds ratio [OR], 1.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.56 to 2.63) and more frequent affirmative responses across the full suicidal spectrum (thoughts about death - OR, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.02 to 4.3; thoughts about suicide - OR, 5; 95% CI, 1.72 to 14.66; suicide attempts - OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 1.03 to 12.67). In boys, thoughts about suicide and unintentional injuries were associated with parental war involvement even after logistic regression. However, girls were less likely to be affected by parental war involvement, and only exhibited signs of psychopathology on the CDI total score., Conclusion: Parental war involvement was associated with negative psychosocial sequels for male children. This relationship is possibly mediated by some kind of identification or secondary traumatization. Suicidality and unintentional injuries are nonspecific markers for a broad range of psychosocial distresses, which is why the suggested target group for preventive interventions should be veteran parents as vectors of this distress.
- Published
- 2012
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50. Infantile masturbation - exclusion of severe diagnosis does not exclude parental distress - case report.
- Author
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Franić T and Franić IU
- Subjects
- Behavior Therapy, Diagnosis, Differential, Education, Female, Humans, Infant, Masturbation rehabilitation, Mother-Child Relations, Shame, Social Stigma, Masturbation psychology, Parents psychology, Psychology, Child
- Published
- 2011
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