Use of services and associated costs for young adults with childhood hyperactivity/conduct problems: 20-year follow-up

Although childhood hyperactivity and conduct problems are associated with difficulties in adulthood, little is known about later service use or public expenditure costs in the UK. To describe the use of services and calculate recent (past 6 months) and early adulthood (since the age of 18 years) pub...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of psychiatry 2014-06, Vol.204 (6), p.441-447
Hauptverfasser: D'Amico, Francesco, Knapp, Martin, Beecham, Jennifer, Sandberg, Seija, Taylor, Eric, Sayal, Kapil
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container_end_page 447
container_issue 6
container_start_page 441
container_title British journal of psychiatry
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creator D'Amico, Francesco
Knapp, Martin
Beecham, Jennifer
Sandberg, Seija
Taylor, Eric
Sayal, Kapil
description Although childhood hyperactivity and conduct problems are associated with difficulties in adulthood, little is known about later service use or public expenditure costs in the UK. To describe the use of services and calculate recent (past 6 months) and early adulthood (since the age of 18 years) public expenditure costs incurred by young adults who had hyperactivity and/or conduct problems during childhood. A 20-year follow-up of a community sample of 6- to 7-year-old boys (n = 83) with hyperactivity only, conduct problems only, mixed hyperactivity and conduct problems, and no behaviour problems (control). Information was obtained about service use; recent (past 6 months), and early adulthood (since age 18 years) public expenditure costs were calculated. High levels of childhood conduct problems were associated with a two- to threefold increase in early adulthood costs, mainly driven by criminal justice contacts. Although the mixed problems group had the highest recent costs in terms of receipt of benefits and health and social care, they had the lowest criminal justice costs. High levels of early childhood conduct problems are particularly associated with increased health, social care and criminal justice costs in adulthood.
doi_str_mv 10.1192/bjp.bp.113.131367
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To describe the use of services and calculate recent (past 6 months) and early adulthood (since the age of 18 years) public expenditure costs incurred by young adults who had hyperactivity and/or conduct problems during childhood. A 20-year follow-up of a community sample of 6- to 7-year-old boys (n = 83) with hyperactivity only, conduct problems only, mixed hyperactivity and conduct problems, and no behaviour problems (control). Information was obtained about service use; recent (past 6 months), and early adulthood (since age 18 years) public expenditure costs were calculated. High levels of childhood conduct problems were associated with a two- to threefold increase in early adulthood costs, mainly driven by criminal justice contacts. Although the mixed problems group had the highest recent costs in terms of receipt of benefits and health and social care, they had the lowest criminal justice costs. 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To describe the use of services and calculate recent (past 6 months) and early adulthood (since the age of 18 years) public expenditure costs incurred by young adults who had hyperactivity and/or conduct problems during childhood. A 20-year follow-up of a community sample of 6- to 7-year-old boys (n = 83) with hyperactivity only, conduct problems only, mixed hyperactivity and conduct problems, and no behaviour problems (control). Information was obtained about service use; recent (past 6 months), and early adulthood (since age 18 years) public expenditure costs were calculated. High levels of childhood conduct problems were associated with a two- to threefold increase in early adulthood costs, mainly driven by criminal justice contacts. Although the mixed problems group had the highest recent costs in terms of receipt of benefits and health and social care, they had the lowest criminal justice costs. 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subjects Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Adulthood
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity - economics
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
Behavior problems
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Childhood
Children
Comorbidity
Conduct disorder
Conduct Disorder - economics
Conduct disorders
Costs
Crime - economics
Crime - statistics & numerical data
Criminal justice
Employment - statistics & numerical data
Follow-Up Studies
Government spending
Health Care Costs - statistics & numerical data
Health care expenditures
Health costs
Health services
Health Services - utilization
Humans
Hyperactivity
Interviews as Topic
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Medical sciences
Mental health
Prevention. Health policy. Planification
Prospective Studies
Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Risk Factors
Social behavior disorders. Criminal behavior. Delinquency
Social justice
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
Social services
Socioeconomic Factors
Teenagers
United Kingdom
Urban Population - statistics & numerical data
Young adults
title Use of services and associated costs for young adults with childhood hyperactivity/conduct problems: 20-year follow-up
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