TY - JOUR
T1 - Healthcare Costs, School Performance, and Health-related Quality of Life in Adolescence Following Psychotic Experiences in Preadolescence
T2 - A Longitudinal Cohort Study
AU - Rimvall, Martin Køster
AU - Wolf, Rasmus Trap
AU - Olsen, Else Marie
AU - Skovgaard, Anne Mette
AU - Clemmensen, Lars
AU - Oxholm, Anne Sophie
AU - Verhulst, Frank
AU - Rask, Charlotte Ulrikka
AU - van Os, Jim
AU - Jeppesen, Pia
N1 - Funding Information:
The current project was supported by grants from the Danish Foundations TrygFonden (J. nr. 7-10-0189, 7-11-0341 and 109903) and the Lundbeckfonden (J. nr. R54-A5843). Martin K. Rimvall was funded by a PhD Grant from the Mental Health Services of the Capital Region of Denmark.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center.All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: [email protected].
PY - 2021/5
Y1 - 2021/5
N2 - Psychotic experiences (PEs) are common in the general population in preadolescence. The implications of PEs on socioeconomic outcomes, including educational attainment, are scarcely described. We aimed to estimate how preadolescent PEs were associated with later healthcare costs, school performance, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescence. A total of 1607 preadolescents from the general population Copenhagen Child Cohort 2000 were assessed for PEs at age 11-12 years and followed up over 5 years using register-based data on mental and somatic healthcare costs, and school performance at age 16. Furthermore, HRQoL was assessed for a subsample of the children at age 16-17. We adjusted for perinatal and family sociodemographic adversities, prior parental mental illness and healthcare use, child IQ-estimate at age 11-12, and parent-rated general psychopathology of their child. PEs were associated with slightly poorer school performance. However, preadolescents with PEs more often reported HRQoL within the lowest 10th percentile (OR = 2.74 [95% CI 1.71-4.37]). Preadolescents who reported PEs had higher average total healthcare costs over the following 5 years. The costs for individuals with PEs were higher for mental healthcare services across primary to tertiary care, but not for somatic care. After adjustments, PEs remained independently associated with higher costs and poorer HRQoL, but not with poorer school performance. In conclusion, PEs are important in mental health screening of preadolescents and identify a group of young people with increased healthcare service-use throughout adolescence and who report poorer HRQoL in adolescence, over and above parent-rated general psychopathology of their child.
AB - Psychotic experiences (PEs) are common in the general population in preadolescence. The implications of PEs on socioeconomic outcomes, including educational attainment, are scarcely described. We aimed to estimate how preadolescent PEs were associated with later healthcare costs, school performance, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adolescence. A total of 1607 preadolescents from the general population Copenhagen Child Cohort 2000 were assessed for PEs at age 11-12 years and followed up over 5 years using register-based data on mental and somatic healthcare costs, and school performance at age 16. Furthermore, HRQoL was assessed for a subsample of the children at age 16-17. We adjusted for perinatal and family sociodemographic adversities, prior parental mental illness and healthcare use, child IQ-estimate at age 11-12, and parent-rated general psychopathology of their child. PEs were associated with slightly poorer school performance. However, preadolescents with PEs more often reported HRQoL within the lowest 10th percentile (OR = 2.74 [95% CI 1.71-4.37]). Preadolescents who reported PEs had higher average total healthcare costs over the following 5 years. The costs for individuals with PEs were higher for mental healthcare services across primary to tertiary care, but not for somatic care. After adjustments, PEs remained independently associated with higher costs and poorer HRQoL, but not with poorer school performance. In conclusion, PEs are important in mental health screening of preadolescents and identify a group of young people with increased healthcare service-use throughout adolescence and who report poorer HRQoL in adolescence, over and above parent-rated general psychopathology of their child.
KW - educational attainment
KW - life satisfaction
KW - service use
KW - subclinical psychosis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85105896576&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/schbul/sbaa175
DO - 10.1093/schbul/sbaa175
M3 - Article
C2 - 33345286
SN - 0586-7614
VL - 47
SP - 682
EP - 691
JO - Schizophrenia bulletin
JF - Schizophrenia bulletin
IS - 3
ER -