
* Institute for Child Health Policy, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida
Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC
| ABSTRACT |
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Methods. A qualitative approach was used to investigate these questions. Focus group interviews were conducted. Content and narrative analyses of interview transcripts were completed using ATLAS.ti.
Results. Thirty-four focus groups and interviews were conducted with 143 young adults with disabilities and special health care needs, family members, and health care providers. Content analysis yielded 3 content domains: transition services, which presents a chronological understanding of the transition process; health care systems, which presents differences between pediatric and adult-oriented medicine and how these differences inhibit transition; and transition narratives, which discusses transition experience in the broader context of relationships between patients and health care providers.
Conclusion. This study demonstrated the presence of important reciprocal relationships that are based on mutual trust between providers and families and are developed as part of the care of chronically ill children. Evidence supports the need for appropriate termination of pediatric relationships as part of the transition process. Evidence further supports the idea that pediatric and adult-oriented medicines represent 2 different medical subcultures. Young adults and family members lack of preparation for successful participation in the adult health care system contributes to problems with HCT.
Key Words: adolescent young adult physician patient relationships
Abbreviations: HCT, health care transition SHCN, special health care need A-OM, adult-oriented medicine A-OP, adult-oriented provider SSI, Supplemental Security Income CF, cystic fibrosis SCD, sickle cell disease HMO, health maintenance organization
As young people mature and their medical and personal needs change, it is important that they receive age-appropriate medical care. The process of moving from pediatric to adult-oriented medicine, health care transition (HCT), is an important and necessary process in the lives of all adolescents and young adults, especially those with disabilities and special health care needs (SHCNs),1,2 yet despite many years of discussion, HCT remains an unfulfilled promise for many young adults with disabilities and SHCNs.3 Although it is widely known that HCT is often unsuccessful, few empirical data have been collected to help understand and explain the difficulties. This study examines the process of HCT posing the following questions: What are the transition experiences of youths and young adults with disabilities and SHCNs, family members, and health care providers? What are promising practices that facilitate successful HCT? What are obstacles that inhibit HCT? In light of the limited data regarding HCT, a qualitative approach was used to answer these questions. In the absence of a term that describes adult medical practice similar to the term "pediatric," we use the phrases "adult-oriented medicine" (A-OM) and "adult-oriented provider" (A-OP) to denote the variety of medical services and providers for individuals who are older than 18 years.
The current literature on HCT is primarily in the form of policy and position statements,2,4,5 program descriptions,6 and suggested transition practices.7 The majority of research has been conducted through surveys of small samples and focused on service provision, needs assessments, and patient satisfaction in condition-specific clinics or hospital-based programs in the United States810 and other countries.11,12 A few qualitative research studies have also been reported.13,14 Details of these studies can be found in Table 1.
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The literature included a number of suggestions for making HCT more successful: beginning transition early, having pediatric providers share medical histories with the A-OP, using nurses to oversee transition,14 and the use of transition clinics.12 Other suggestions involved helping the young person become an expert in his or her own medical condition, improving his or her understanding of the difference between pediatric medicine and A-OM, providing young adults with opportunities to practice independent disease management and navigating the adult health care systems,13 and promoting peer-to-peer information sharing.14 Providing training to A-OPs about the adult sequelae of pediatric-onset chronic conditions was also suggested.13
Although the literature provides some information about barriers and identifies promising practices, a full understanding of the transition experience and the variables that contribute to its success or failure remains illusive. We hypothesized that by examining the lived HCT experience of youths and young adults with a broad range of SHCNs and disabilities and their families and health care providers, we could gain a more in-depth understanding of the process and identify practices and factors that make transition more or less successful.
| METHODS |
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Design
Participants who represented 3 groups (youths and young adults with disabilities and SHCNs, family members, and health care providers) were recruited at childrens hospitals, outpatient clinics and treatment programs, community medical centers, and professional meetings. In keeping with the exploratory nature of the study, participants were not expected to constitute a representative sample. However, individuals with a variety of diagnoses, medical conditions, racial and ethnic backgrounds, geographic origins, and medical practice experience were recruited. Most participants were identified through nominations by health care providers. Inclusion criteria for adolescents/young adults were age (1335 years), a chronic disability or SHCN, and initiation of treatment occurring before age 18. Family members consisted of the parents, guardians, grandparents, siblings, and spouses of adolescents and young adults with chronic disabilities and SHCNs. Participation of family members was not dependent on their childs participation in the research and vice versa. All focus groups were held in accessible spaces, and adapted communication options were available. Adolescents/young adults and family members were provided with a $25.00 incentive. Health care providers with experience or knowledge of HCT were recruited through professional contacts and nominations with the goal to represent a range of medical training and experience.
Focus groups and interviews (occasions when there was only 1 participant) were 60 to 90 minutes in length (see Table 2). Separate focus groups were held for youths and young adults, families, and providers. Focus groups were conducted using a standard protocol (see Question Protocol), and focus group leaders (n = 3) received training to ensure uniformity in the implementation of the protocol. The research was approved by Institutional Review Board of the University of Florida.
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| RESULTS |
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Participants also believed that youths whose condition was progressive in nature and likely to shorten significantly their life span should not be transferred to new A-OPs for end-of-life care if the change was not desired by the young adult or the family. Participants also noted that it was important to recognize the changing developmental needs of these young adults when providing medical care.
Stages of Transition
Participants viewed transition as a developmental process composed of 3 stages that we have labeled "envisioning a future," "age of responsibility," and "age of transition." The first 2 stages involved general developmental tasks that laid the foundation for addressing transition-specific activities that occurred during the "age of transition."
"Envisioning a future" was described as beginning as soon as a disability or SHCN was identified. Envisioning the child growing up to be an adult helped to promote future planning. Participants acknowledged that plans were subject to extensive revisions as the childs abilities emerged over time. However, it was asking questions about the future rather than the details of the plans that was important. Asking questions about future education, employment options, independent community living, and needed health care prompted families and providers to initiate activities that promoted the childs future independence. As one parent stated, "He [the childs pediatrician] looked at the kids developmentally. So when Bobby was 3 or 4 months old, he said to me, Where do you want Bobby to be in 20 years? And because of that, I began to think about where it was that I wanted him to be in 20 years" (Fam).
In conjunction with envisioning and planning for a future, participants recommended starting the transition process early. Practitioners and parents alike talked about the importance of "starting early." One parent stated, "I think a lot has to do with instilling an attitude of self-confidence with the kids early on and just expecting them to do things for themselves" (Fam). "He [pediatric specialist] was a very firm believer in the children taking responsibility for their own health care. And so when Bobby was 2
years old, he started answering his own questions when we came to clinic, and as a family we started rehearsing those questions and answers on the way to clinic" (Fam).
"Age of responsibility" was the second stage delineated by participants. It was during this stage that family members laid the foundation of future independence by teaching and giving responsibility to the child to carry out tasks of daily living and medical self-care. Examples included talking with health care providers, ordering and taking medications, and developing positive medical habits and routines. Several participants suggested that this transfer of responsibility occur before the onset of adolescence.
The "age of transition" was divided into 2 periods: adolescence (ages 1217) and young adulthood (ages 1823). The dividing point for these periods was flexible but centered around the legal age of emancipation, which begins in the United States at 18 and generally is completed by age 21. With some allowance for developmental delays, these age markers were in agreement with the typical expectations for independence in healthy young adults. Examples include, "Since hes been 16 or 17 years old, hes gone to a lot of his [doctors] visits by himself" (Fam); "So around 14 is when we usually say and it varies if we have problems with appointments, we have the child make the appointment or the adolescent" (HCP-Nurse).
Maturity and experience were also seen as necessary to carry out successfully medical responsibilities associated with transition. The following statement from a pediatric cardiologist draws the distinction between maturity and chronological age and its importance in transition: "If someone is on coumadin because they have an artificial valve which will clot if they stop taking it, our practice is fairly aggressive about ensuring that they do the appropriate monitoring for that and track them down. I think thats an uncommon trait in a practice that only follows adults, and it isnt uncommon that someone is 28 [years old] before they are responsible for that, and it makes us hesitant to transition into practices that dont have that degree of follow through."
In addition to strategies for facilitating the HCT developmental process, most of the participants reported obstacles that impeded transition. These are discussed below in Health Care Systems and Transition Narratives.
Health Care Systems
Participants noted differences in the operation of pediatric and adult-oriented medical systems that created a number of barriers to transition. Four systems barrier are discussed below: aging out of treatment, insurance/funding, availability of care, and practice differences.
Aging out of Treatment
As found in childrens hospital mission statements and state and federal agency funding mandates, pediatric systems generally used the ages of 18 or 21 as the limit for services. Age limits were also related to service providers expertise and comfort with providing certain services. Examples identified by participants included the refusal of pediatric anesthesiologists to provide anesthesia services to adult patients in childrens hospitals and the licensing guidelines for pediatric nurse practitioners that limit treatment to individuals under the age of 25.
Noted earlier, family members and providers discussed how transition was often based on age rather than on maturity. As stated by 1 health care provider, "Some of our patients are ready and others are not, but the way the system is set up, its defined by age and not by readiness in some disease groups" (HCP-SW).
Discharge from pediatrics was also related to the display of what were considered adult behaviors, as reflected in the following quote: "Pregnancy is an automatic ... if you do the adult behaviors, then you earn yourself a ticket to the adult program, and thats not a punitive measure by any means" (HCP-SW). Other behaviors that prompted transition included substance abuse, criminal activity, and behaviors inconsistent with pediatric inpatient treatment areas.
It was also noted that when young adults were transitioned to A-OM, they found themselves in a medical system that is organized for much older adults: "We have to acknowledge that a 25-year-old young adult is an old patient for a pediatric hospital and is too young for most adult hospitals, where the average is 55 or 60" (HCP-SW).
Insurance/Funding
Another age-related HCT concern was the continuation of health insurance. Although the funding of health care for children is not without problems, all of the children and young adults who were younger than 18 years and participated in this study had some form of private and/or public health insurance. Private health insurance was linked to parents employment and typically ended between the ages of 18 and 23. Coverage to age 23 usually depended on the young adults continuing formal education. "Our kids, whenever they get out of school or they hit 23, in our case they cant be covered by our insurance any more, and sometimes they have no insurance" (Fam).
Public funding from states Title V Children with Special Health Care Needs Programs typically ends at 21 regardless of the young adults employment or education status. Some young adults had received Medicaid coverage because they were eligible for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits. However, because the standards for SSI eligibility after age 18 are more stringent, some of these young adults were not eligible for SSI and as a result lost Medicaid coverage. It was also noted the amount, duration, and scope of services funded by Medicaid for individuals over 21 is significantly less than for those under 21. "Medicaid coverage drops drastically when they turn 21. They paid for fewer supplies, they were not going to pay for the ventilator, which he needed to sustain life, and he was getting 16 hours of nursing care for these 3 to 4 years up until he turned 21. The very day he turned 21, he switched over to [a significantly reduced schedule of] nursing visit, which Medicaid would pay for" (HCP-Nurse).
Availability of Care: Practitioner Knowledge, Experience, and Training
Young adults and families who sought A-OPs (either from personal desire to transition or as a result of an impending termination of pediatric services) reported that it was very difficult to find A-OPs who matched their pediatric providers in their knowledge about, training in, and experience with their disability or SHCN. This perception was confirmed by pediatric providers who participated in the study. As stated by one physician, "A child with cystic fibrosis (CF) who goes to a pediatric pulmonologist and who you will see periodically, they will continue to go to that peds pulmonologist because when they go to an adult pulmonologist, they dont know what to do with them" (HCP-Physician).
Differences in pediatric and adult-oriented treatment approaches also led to negative assessments of A-OPs medical knowledge. A nurse reflecting on the negative transition experiences of a client stated, "And truth be known that ours was a more up-to-date treatment. So it was possible that the adult treater was not familiar enough with the disorder, so he was sort of falling back on medical knowledge that he knew from way back when and really wasnt up to date on it [current treatment]" (HCP-Nurse).
It was also believed that many A-OPs had not previously treated young adults with pediatric-onset disabilities and SHCNs, and this lack of experience reduced confidence in A-OPs ability. Family members recounted, "Ive heard a lot from [adult-oriented] doctors that theyve never seen a child with significant disabilities ever before" (Fam); and, "Im apprehensive because I know he [adult-oriented physician] doesnt have a whole lot of experience with patients with CF" (Fam).
Health care providers shared a similar understanding. One physician observed, "We [pediatric providers] are better at taking care of these kids, and so they live longer, when in the past, the adult cardiologist never saw a kid with this kind of congenital heart disease because they always died before they were 21" (HCP-Physician).
Similar comments were made about the treatment of spina bifida, sickle cell disease (SCD), and other childhood-onset chronic conditions. Young adults and family members cited the A-OPs perceived lack of knowledge and experience as their reason for wanting to stay with pediatric providers. In addition, young adults and family members said that they did not want to "start all over again" and educate the new A-OP about their medical condition.
Providers attributed the A-OPs lack of knowledge and experience to the different training and residency experiences of pediatric and internal medicine residents. "The adults [oriented providers] dont necessarily have the training to take care of those subspecialty needs" (HCP-Physician). As a result, knowledge about current treatments and research on childhood-onset disabilities and SHCNs are generally limited to pediatric providers despite the fact that young adults are expected to seek care from A-OPs. It also was apparent in discussions of medical training that pediatric physicians and A-OPs were acculturated to different styles of medical practice during residency. Families and young adults were quick to notice these differences between pediatric medicine and A-OM, as is discussed in the next section.
Practice Differences: Change in Service
An observation heard consistently throughout the focus groups from all participant groups was the perceived practice difference between pediatric medicine and A-OM. The majority of the participants had extensive experience with treatment from a pediatric perspective. Experience with A-OM was varied and ranged from accessing services for ones self or a family member to the accounts of young adults as relayed through their pediatric providers. Practice differences are organized under the following headings: organization of care, communication, and family involvement.
Organization of Care
Pediatric care was perceived as better organized for the patient and his or her family. Participants reported that the majority of pediatric medical care was provided by 1 physician provider or by a pediatric clinic that provided multiple clinical and treatment services at 1 location. However, the following observation paints a different image of A-OM: "One complaint I get from my adult CF patients that are working ... is they already spend their vacation time and most of their sick time on health care needs and if I then transition them to a system where they have to see 5 different or 6 different doctors, it doesnt work well. One of the real problems I see is that internal medicine has not really adopted the idea of comprehensive care or specialty care that encompasses the patients needs" (HCP-Physician).
Differences were also observed in the number and variety of staff found in pediatric medicine and A-OM settings. Pediatric patients were "used to certain level of care which incorporated social workers, nurses who understood your illness and had a much more psychosocial approach to your illness. And then you get kind of tossed into the adult role, which is very different. It is very much disease centered, quick and dirty" (HCP-Physician).
Pediatric staff were perceived to be more available for questions and support. As one pediatrician observed, "We clearly provide far more comprehensive care and emotional support to our adult patients than in the internal medicine model" (HCP-Physician). Participants also described a different feel to pediatric treatment. Pediatric providers were perceived as more supportive and involved with the patient and the family. This was reflected in the previous quotes and in the following: "There was ... a warm cozy sort of feeling about Childrens [hospital] that she didnt get there [adult setting]" (Fam).
Treatment practices and interactions between patients and providers also differed. Young adults and family members with SCD observed that the treatment of pain in adult-oriented settings was very different from that provided in a childrens hospital. As one family member observed, "If it is a child, they will give them the pain medicine without questions, but when you turn adult, its a different thing. Like youre not really in pain, you just want medications" (Fam). Young adults who had SCD and sought care in A-OM settings stated that they were treated as though they were drug addicts when they spoke knowledgeably about which pain medication and dosage would help to relieve a pain crisis.
There was also a different understanding of the role that patient education plays in supporting the patients adherence to a treatment regimen: "In CF, we really educate the families and the patients because I think it improves adherence, and without education, they wont take their 80 pills a day. But when one of our patients goes to an internist and says this is how I treat my CF, will you write the scripts, the sparks fly. So you can educate them [young adults] so they know what they should be doing, but the people who are receiving them dont want to hear that and say, I know how to do it right " (HCP-Physician).
Communication
Participants reported that there was little communication between pediatric providers and A-OPs. This lack of communication could be observed at an institutional level. "We are literally across the street, the pediatric and the adult hospital, and yet it feels like theres a moat and a wall and maybe a couple of states and an army [between us]" (HCP-Physician). This lack of communication affected the transfer of knowledge between pediatric medicine and A-OM and also made referral to A-OPs difficult. Another concern voiced by pediatric providers was the lack of follow-up communication after a young adult had been transferred to an A-OP. One physician noted the time and interest that he had invested in a young adult patient: "When you transition them, there is very little feedback. ... So why would I need to know what had happened to this patient that I had followed for 14 years? So there is usually very little information that comes back from the medical arena" (HCP-Physician).
Participants also reported that communication patterns between providers were influenced by residency training, continuing education, professional meetings, and the physical separation between pediatric and adult-oriented treatment spaces. This limited the sharing of knowledge, resources, and continuity of treatment practices across pediatric medicine and A-OM.
Family Involvement
Participants in the study saw pediatric medicine as being very family oriented. Although adolescent patients spent increasing amounts of time alone with health care providers, families generally saw themselves as having an ongoing role in the care of the young adult and continued to communicate with the pediatric providers. As discussed in Transition Narratives below, the relationship between pediatric providers and families was an important component of health care provided to children with disabilities and SHCNs. A-OPs focus on the individual patient left parents without a role in their childs treatment and limited their ability to share important knowledge with the new health care providers. After many years of supporting and being involved in their childrens health care, parents reported feeling excluded when their child transitioned to A-OM.
Transition Narratives
Many participants shared transition stories. These stories provided context, explanations, and insight into the lived experience of transition and generally included 3 sections: background information, relationships with pediatric providers, and changes that occurred after going to an A-OP.
Background information included length of time that the young adult had been in treatment with his or her physician or clinic. Time in treatment was readily recalled and was frequently >10 years. Youths and families also stated that treatment success, independence, and, sometimes, life itself were attributed to the knowledge and expertise of the pediatric health care provider(s).
In the "relationship" section of the stories, participants described what made the health care relationship with their pediatric providers special. Highlighted were providers respect for the familys and patients knowledge of and experience with the disability or SHCN and a concern for the young persons overall development. Physicians also expressed their strong bond with patients and their families: "I dont know if I would put the effort in if I didnt feel bonded to them. ... Im seeing the patients 4 to 6 times a year from birth to adulthood" (HCP-Physician). Other important attributes included "rapport," "mutual understanding," and, most important and frequently mentioned, "trust." As one young person put it, "I was with Dr O and so he helped me a whole lot, ever since I was born, so I trust him a lot" (YA-16). Trust was an expected and central component of the relationship with pediatric health care providers. Trust was so much a part of the relationship that families and youths no longer reflected on it and it was viewed as a natural part of the health care relationship. Physicians also spoke about their trust in patients and families, in their knowledge and expertise that comes from living with a SHCN, and in their ability to make sound medical decisions and to determine the need for care.
In contrast to the almost idyllic context within which they described pediatric care, families and young adults described distinctly negative experiences with A-OM. All participant groups described difficulty establishing trusting relationships with new A-OPs. This was magnified when the A-OPs were unfamiliar with the youths condition and/or current treatments and were unwilling to recognize the familys or young adults proven expertise and work with them as "equal partners." Young adults and family members wanted to have a positive relationship with their new health care providers, but negative health care experiences with A-OPs were quick to erode trust and made it very difficult to replicate the satisfactory relationships that they previously had with pediatric providers.
Pediatric providers who had cared for young adults as children also expressed a need to trust A-OPs who would be responsible for the future care of the young adult: "I think theres a level of trust that has to be between the pediatric hematologist and the adult hematologist so that I can trust that you are going to provide the very best care. Im a little bit afraid. Ive been taking care of this child since he was a infant. [Hes] doing well and I think theres some fear for really unknown reasons that I think a lot of the pediatric providers feel. Like, once I transition you over to adult care, its going to be blown" (HCP-Nurse).
The section that described experiences with A-OM generally began with a statement of the young adults previous good or stable health. The stories then described how the young adults health was jeopardized or negatively affected by A-OM. One adolescent talked about her emergency department admission for a medical crisis at an adult-oriented hospital. From the adolescents perspective, the treatment was not comparable to her previous pediatric experiences. "So, I cant trust those people [adult providers] to know what to do. ... Because they could have given me something that could of killed me. So, and then they didnt know what was wrong with me or how it happened. So they didnt treat me properly, so they had to transfer me here [pediatric hospital]" (YA-15). A pediatric provider spoke about 1 young adult patient who was forced by her health maintenance organization (HMO) to "see an internist and adult pulmonologist with no experience with CF, knew nothing about CF, and within 6 to 8 months had removed all of the expensive medication and treatment from the patients regimen, saving [the HMO] about $30 000 a year in treatment and costing the patient probably 5 to 10 years of progression in their lung disease. And the patient stayed with [the HMO] for about 4 years, in which case she got severely ill, came back here [pediatric hospital], and with the threat of a law suit, [the HMO] then decided that they would pay for care here [pediatric hospital], the rest of that individuals life because they clearly had been negligent. ... It was a total disaster for the patient, and thats one of the concerns that I really have" (HCP-Physician). Other participants spoke about their negative adult care experiences with surgery, inpatient units, and outpatient visits.
It is well documented that the ending of long-term clinical care is an important component of the therapeutic relationship and that termination should be conducted in a thoughtful and planned manner.2528 However, many participants said that pediatric treatment services were ended abruptly. As discussed by 1 participant, "There was a sense that we had just kicked them out the door rather than talking to them about it. ... And part of that psychological process needs to be that the staff has to say good bye and terminate, and thats a loss, and the patient also needs to be able to say good bye and terminate, and we dont really have any rituals the way we might have around other kinds of termination" (HCP-SW).
Evidence from the focus groups also supported the idea that pediatric and adult medical practices represent 2 different medical subcultures.29 The following speaks to some of the differences: "There are a lot of [different] philosophies between adult medicine and pediatric medicine. That is 1 of the things and I think that both the pediatric side and the adult side have their valid points and this is why transition is so important because you cant pick a date and just stop. So I think thats why its so important for the pediatric and the adult sides to work together to graduate the patient from dependent care to the independent care when its appropriate medically and developmentally. And I think both sides need to have a greater awareness of both needs" (HCP-Physician).
| CONCLUSION: IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE |
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Participants understood HCT to be a long-term developmental process, involving the family, the child, professionals, and the broader health care system. The process should start in childhood or at the time of diagnosis by "envisioning a future." Providers can help to facilitate transition by encouraging families to envision their childs future and promoting medical independence.
Participants identified significant differences between pediatric medicine and A-OM. This research supports the finding that there are 2 distinct medical practice subcultures that do not share a common understanding of what needs to be done operationally to facilitate the transitional process. Health care providers can help to bridge the differences between pediatric medicine and A-OM through joint training and educational experiences in the adult sequelae of childhood-onset disabilities and SHCNs. Communication can be enhanced through the use of a standard "transition note" that includes a concise and relevant medical summary, current medical references, and strategies for working with and using the medical expertise of the young adult and his or her family. Providers can also help young adults and families understand and prepare for the practice and cultural differences between pediatric medicine and A-OM.
Another significant issue is financing. HCT occurs at a time when most young adults are least likely to be covered by health insurance.30 Whereas healthy young adults tend not to use health care, the loss of insurance coverage is a significant problem for young adults who have SHCNs and require ongoing medical care.31,32 Young adults with SHCNs are less likely to acquire employment-based insurance because of their high rates of underemployment and unemployment.32 Although insurance coverage is an important issue, it is not the sole cause of HCT difficulties, because HCT is a significant problem in countries that have national health insurance programs.11,12 Advocacy on the part of the pediatric and adult health care communities is critical to providing seamless insurance coverage for all young adults.
All participant groups identified a trusting and reciprocal relationship among providers, family members, and young adults as the basis of successful pediatric health care. It was within the context of these "trusting" relationships that evaluations of A-OPs medical knowledge and experience were made. Negative transition experiences with A-OM serves as warnings to transition. One bad experience was enough to make young adults, families, and providers think twice about transitioning young adults to A-OM. Resistance on the part of young adults and their families is often cited as a reason that transition is not successful. However, our results suggest that resistance on the part of young adults, family members, and providers to transition is not unfounded but is a sign that the care offered by A-OPs is perceived to be inferior to the care provided in the pediatric medical system.
The results also underscore the necessity for pediatric providers to terminate existing treatment relationships in a therapeutic manner to facilitate development of new relationships with A-OPs. Successful termination affirms the young adults personal responsibility and independence and provides an opportunity to verbalize important feelings and concerns. The development of rites of passage that support and mark HCT just like graduation from high school marks a significant step in the education process would serve to bring closure to the pediatric health care experience and establish new positive relationships with the adult-oriented health care system.
Inherent in the design of our study are 2 limitations that need to be recognized. First, many disability/diagnoses were represented by the participants, but only a few individuals had experience with a given condition. Thus, differences that exist in the transition experience of individuals who represent different conditions could not be identified or addressed. Also, there was a preponderance of providers from pediatrics; thus, the perspective of adult providers was not well represented, and additional research is need to describe better the transition experiences of A-OPs.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We acknowledge the thoughtful review and suggestions of Debra Skinner, PhD, to the analysis and description of this research.
We thank our colleagues at the Consortium for Children and Youth With Disabilities and Special Health Care needs for comments about and support of this research project. We also thank the participants in this study for sharing their transition experiences. Without their support this research would not have been possible.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Reprint requests to (J.G.R.) Institute for Child Health Policy, University of Florida, PO Box 100147, Gainesville, FL 32608. E-mail: jgr{at}ichp.ufl.edu
No conflict of interest declared.
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