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Healthcare utilization and costs of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities associated with newly diagnosed adult ADHD

Healthcare utilization and costs of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities associated with newly diagnosed adult ADHD
Healthcare utilization and costs of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities associated with newly diagnosed adult ADHD
Background
Psychiatric and somatic problems in young adulthood have been found to be main drivers of costs in individuals with childhood ADHD. However, knowledge of the patterns of healthcare utilization and costs of comorbidities in middle-aged adults with newly diagnosed ADHD is very limited.

Method
We studied individuals born 1966–1978 (from the Swedish Total Population Register) with newly diagnosed ADHD between the ages of 30–45 years and individuals without ADHD matched on birthdate, birth county, and sex. Healthcare utilization and expenditure for psychiatric and somatic disorders were obtained over four years (two years pre- and post-initial ADHD diagnosis).

Results
Middle-aged adults with newly diagnosed ADHD showed higher levels of healthcare utilization and costs (outpatient, inpatient, medications) for psychiatric and somatic comorbidities relative to adults without ADHD, both before and after the initial diagnosis. Females showed greater average group differences across the study period for medication prescriptions than males. Total incremental annual costs per capita were €2478.76 in adults with ADHD relative to those without, and costs were mainly driven by inpatient care. Psychiatric outpatient visits were statistically significantly higher the year before the ADHD diagnosis compared with two years before and after the diagnosis.

Conclusion
This study demonstrates the substantial burden of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities in middle-aged adults newly diagnosed with ADHD. Psychiatric outpatient visits peaked in the year leading up to the ADHD diagnosis. Findings further suggested that females with ADHD may seek more treatment for comorbidities than males, which may reflect a general female tendency.
1600-0447
50-59
Garcia‐Argibay, Miguel
e5a6941e-4dcc-401a-9de4-09557c8856ef
Pandya, Ekta
1d271e45-479e-4135-9581-c1f99ce50cc2
Ahnemark, Ewa
85d7b9b4-a443-4ee3-9eea-b876a1261736
Werner‐Kiechle, Tamara
de2319a3-93d8-4a32-9c51-8ea14b095ab6
Andersson, Lars Magnus
a5ca1d8b-0a94-4c92-a91e-8e6a6dabf764
Larsson, Henrik
b61de48a-668e-4d65-b989-49005020b0dd
Rietz, Ebba Du
fcfdb832-03aa-4236-8fb4-147bf166f13c
Garcia‐Argibay, Miguel
e5a6941e-4dcc-401a-9de4-09557c8856ef
Pandya, Ekta
1d271e45-479e-4135-9581-c1f99ce50cc2
Ahnemark, Ewa
85d7b9b4-a443-4ee3-9eea-b876a1261736
Werner‐Kiechle, Tamara
de2319a3-93d8-4a32-9c51-8ea14b095ab6
Andersson, Lars Magnus
a5ca1d8b-0a94-4c92-a91e-8e6a6dabf764
Larsson, Henrik
b61de48a-668e-4d65-b989-49005020b0dd
Rietz, Ebba Du
fcfdb832-03aa-4236-8fb4-147bf166f13c

Garcia‐Argibay, Miguel, Pandya, Ekta, Ahnemark, Ewa, Werner‐Kiechle, Tamara, Andersson, Lars Magnus, Larsson, Henrik and Rietz, Ebba Du (2021) Healthcare utilization and costs of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities associated with newly diagnosed adult ADHD. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 144 (1), 50-59. (doi:10.1111/acps.13297).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background
Psychiatric and somatic problems in young adulthood have been found to be main drivers of costs in individuals with childhood ADHD. However, knowledge of the patterns of healthcare utilization and costs of comorbidities in middle-aged adults with newly diagnosed ADHD is very limited.

Method
We studied individuals born 1966–1978 (from the Swedish Total Population Register) with newly diagnosed ADHD between the ages of 30–45 years and individuals without ADHD matched on birthdate, birth county, and sex. Healthcare utilization and expenditure for psychiatric and somatic disorders were obtained over four years (two years pre- and post-initial ADHD diagnosis).

Results
Middle-aged adults with newly diagnosed ADHD showed higher levels of healthcare utilization and costs (outpatient, inpatient, medications) for psychiatric and somatic comorbidities relative to adults without ADHD, both before and after the initial diagnosis. Females showed greater average group differences across the study period for medication prescriptions than males. Total incremental annual costs per capita were €2478.76 in adults with ADHD relative to those without, and costs were mainly driven by inpatient care. Psychiatric outpatient visits were statistically significantly higher the year before the ADHD diagnosis compared with two years before and after the diagnosis.

Conclusion
This study demonstrates the substantial burden of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities in middle-aged adults newly diagnosed with ADHD. Psychiatric outpatient visits peaked in the year leading up to the ADHD diagnosis. Findings further suggested that females with ADHD may seek more treatment for comorbidities than males, which may reflect a general female tendency.

Text
Acta Psychiatr Scand - 2021 - Garcia‐Argibay - Healthcare utilization and costs of psychiatric and somatic comorbidities (1) - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 March 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 May 2021
Published date: July 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495908
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495908
ISSN: 1600-0447
PURE UUID: b960b711-6d95-43b0-9a3e-523a0c4c7df5
ORCID for Miguel Garcia‐Argibay: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4811-2330

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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2024 17:35
Last modified: 28 Nov 2024 03:08

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Contributors

Author: Miguel Garcia‐Argibay ORCID iD
Author: Ekta Pandya
Author: Ewa Ahnemark
Author: Tamara Werner‐Kiechle
Author: Lars Magnus Andersson
Author: Henrik Larsson
Author: Ebba Du Rietz

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