News

Teens' Health-Related Social Problems Often Overlooked


 

Major Finding: The average rate of screening for a single health-related social problem was 40%.

Data Source: Analysis of screening for health-related social problems in 362 adolescents.

Disclosures: Dr. Fleegler reported no relevant disclosures.

VANCOUVER, B.C. – Adolescents are seldom screened for health-related social problems, research suggests.

Among 362 patients, aged 15-25 years surveyed in an urban, adolescent/young adult medicine clinic, the rate of screening in the previous year by any health care provider averaged 40% per health-related social domain.

Adolescents experience a broad range of social problems that can deleteriously affect their health, Dr. Eric W. Fleegler said at the meeting. “We need to implement universal screening for health-related social problems, and we need to develop the systems that will provide our patients with the needed referrals,” he said.

Yet, office visits during adolescence are often limited by insurance protocols, even though these young people may need more frequent visits during certain times of transition and major life changes, he said.

Among the nine domains (housing problems, food insecurity, nutrition and fitness, education, substance abuse, interpersonal violence, safety equipment, income security, and health care access), 9% of patients were screened for all and 15% were screened for none.

Screening rates were lowest for housing problems and food insecurity at 29% each. The top three screening rates were for nutrition and fitness at 66%, education at 56%, and substance abuse at 52%.

Without screening, adolescents might miss opportunities for referral. Currently, there are no data available on actual referral needs for social problems among adolescents, said Dr. Fleegler, a pediatric emergency physician at Children's Hospital and a pediatrics instructor at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

In the current analysis, referrals were lowest for interpersonal violence at 11% and for safety equipment and substance abuse at 14% each.

The highest domains for referrals were nutrition and fitness at 46%, income security at 35%, and education at 31%.

The analysis was part of a larger study evaluating the efficacy of The Online Advocate, a self-administered, Web-based screening and referral tool for health-related social problems.

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