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Secondary care specialist visits made by children and young people prescribed antidepressants in primary care: a descriptive study using the QResearch database

Secondary care specialist visits made by children and young people prescribed antidepressants in primary care: a descriptive study using the QResearch database
Secondary care specialist visits made by children and young people prescribed antidepressants in primary care: a descriptive study using the QResearch database
Background: antidepressants may be used to manage a number of conditions in children and young people including depression, anxiety, and obsessive compulsive disorder. UK guidelines for the treatment of depression in children and young people recommend that antidepressants should only be initiated following assessment and diagnosis by a child and adolescent psychiatrist. The aim of this study was to summarise visits to mental health specialists and indications recorded around the time of antidepressant initiation in children and young people in UK primary care.

Methods: the study used linked English primary care electronic health records and Hospital Episode Statistics secondary care data. The study included 5-17 year-olds first prescribed antidepressants between January 2006 and December 2017. Records of visits to paediatric or psychiatric specialists and potential indications (from a pre-specified list) were extracted. Events were counted if recorded less than 12 months before or 6 months after the first antidepressant prescription. Results were stratified by first antidepressant type (all, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic and related antidepressants), and by age group (5-11 years, 12-17 years).

Results: in total, 33,031 5-17 year-olds were included. Of these, 12,149 (37%) had a record of visiting a paediatrician or a psychiatric specialist in the specified time window. The majority of recorded visits (7154, 22%) were to paediatricians. Of those prescribed SSRIs, 5463/22,130 (25%) had a record of visiting a child and adolescent psychiatrist. Overall 17,972 (54%) patients had a record of at least one of the pre-specified indications. Depression was the most frequently recorded indication (12,501, 38%), followed by anxiety (4155, 13%).

Conclusions: the results suggest many children and young people are being prescribed antidepressants without the recommended involvement of a relevant specialist. These findings may justify both greater training for GPs in child and adolescent mental health, and greater access to specialist care and non-pharmacological treatments. Further research is needed to explore factors that influence how and why GPs prescribe antidepressants to children and young people and the real-world practice barriers to adherence to clinical guidelines.
Adolescent, Antidepressants, Anxiety, Child, Depression, Epidemiology, Mental health, Primary health care, SSRIs
1741-7015
Jack, Ruth
44101345-2e4b-4f88-a4cf-4af9a2cd170b
Joseph, Rebecca
ad3072ce-d3db-4bba-8957-5159162385a3
Coupland, Carol
5d123e7a-f406-4d6b-a09d-2e019de3686f
Butler, Debbie
282e315a-60ce-4f2f-8664-7e0b4fee6b90
Hollis, Chris
467c11b0-1ef5-4456-8101-cdc7e451fa33
Morriss, Richard
2c3879ac-aa89-433b-a547-378d01a36d0c
Knaggs, Roger David
8d23befc-6fa4-4e7d-8ede-fced2f666843
Cipriani, Andrea
5f7a3bde-ab1b-4b14-a9a3-ac6912b406a7
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Hippisley-Cox, Julia
ffe3b07c-6ca2-4487-b69b-6ea2b039ab13
Jack, Ruth
44101345-2e4b-4f88-a4cf-4af9a2cd170b
Joseph, Rebecca
ad3072ce-d3db-4bba-8957-5159162385a3
Coupland, Carol
5d123e7a-f406-4d6b-a09d-2e019de3686f
Butler, Debbie
282e315a-60ce-4f2f-8664-7e0b4fee6b90
Hollis, Chris
467c11b0-1ef5-4456-8101-cdc7e451fa33
Morriss, Richard
2c3879ac-aa89-433b-a547-378d01a36d0c
Knaggs, Roger David
8d23befc-6fa4-4e7d-8ede-fced2f666843
Cipriani, Andrea
5f7a3bde-ab1b-4b14-a9a3-ac6912b406a7
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Hippisley-Cox, Julia
ffe3b07c-6ca2-4487-b69b-6ea2b039ab13

Jack, Ruth, Joseph, Rebecca, Coupland, Carol, Butler, Debbie, Hollis, Chris, Morriss, Richard, Knaggs, Roger David, Cipriani, Andrea, Cortese, Samuele and Hippisley-Cox, Julia (2020) Secondary care specialist visits made by children and young people prescribed antidepressants in primary care: a descriptive study using the QResearch database. BMC Medicine, 18 (1), [93]. (doi:10.1186/s12916-020-01560-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: antidepressants may be used to manage a number of conditions in children and young people including depression, anxiety, and obsessive compulsive disorder. UK guidelines for the treatment of depression in children and young people recommend that antidepressants should only be initiated following assessment and diagnosis by a child and adolescent psychiatrist. The aim of this study was to summarise visits to mental health specialists and indications recorded around the time of antidepressant initiation in children and young people in UK primary care.

Methods: the study used linked English primary care electronic health records and Hospital Episode Statistics secondary care data. The study included 5-17 year-olds first prescribed antidepressants between January 2006 and December 2017. Records of visits to paediatric or psychiatric specialists and potential indications (from a pre-specified list) were extracted. Events were counted if recorded less than 12 months before or 6 months after the first antidepressant prescription. Results were stratified by first antidepressant type (all, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic and related antidepressants), and by age group (5-11 years, 12-17 years).

Results: in total, 33,031 5-17 year-olds were included. Of these, 12,149 (37%) had a record of visiting a paediatrician or a psychiatric specialist in the specified time window. The majority of recorded visits (7154, 22%) were to paediatricians. Of those prescribed SSRIs, 5463/22,130 (25%) had a record of visiting a child and adolescent psychiatrist. Overall 17,972 (54%) patients had a record of at least one of the pre-specified indications. Depression was the most frequently recorded indication (12,501, 38%), followed by anxiety (4155, 13%).

Conclusions: the results suggest many children and young people are being prescribed antidepressants without the recommended involvement of a relevant specialist. These findings may justify both greater training for GPs in child and adolescent mental health, and greater access to specialist care and non-pharmacological treatments. Further research is needed to explore factors that influence how and why GPs prescribe antidepressants to children and young people and the real-world practice barriers to adherence to clinical guidelines.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 March 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 April 2020
Published date: 30 April 2020
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s).
Keywords: Adolescent, Antidepressants, Anxiety, Child, Depression, Epidemiology, Mental health, Primary health care, SSRIs

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 439224
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/439224
ISSN: 1741-7015
PURE UUID: 30547381-1a9b-4b07-aae9-1715027eda85
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

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Date deposited: 07 Apr 2020 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:29

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Contributors

Author: Ruth Jack
Author: Rebecca Joseph
Author: Carol Coupland
Author: Debbie Butler
Author: Chris Hollis
Author: Richard Morriss
Author: Roger David Knaggs
Author: Andrea Cipriani
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Author: Julia Hippisley-Cox

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