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What Types of Hospitals Do Adolescents and Young Adults With Complex Chronic Conditions Use?

Ashley Jenkins, Jay G. Berry, James M. Perrin, Karen Kuhlthau, Matt Hall, Peter J. Dunbar, Clarissa Hoover, Brigid Garrity, Morgan K. Crossman, Katherine A. Auger

2021Academic Pediatrics19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Hospitalizations for children with complex chronic conditions (CCC) at pediatric hospitals have risen over time. Little is known about what hospital types, pediatric or adult, adolescents, and young adults (AYA) with CCCs use. We assessed the types of hospitals used by AYAs with CCCs. METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study of 856,120 hospitalizations for AYAs ages 15-to-30 years with ≥1 CCC in the 2017 National Inpatient Sample. We identified AYA with CCC by ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes using the pediatric CCC classification system version 2. Hospital types included pediatric hospitals (n = 70), adult hospitals with pediatric services (n = 277), and adult hospitals without pediatric services (n = 3975). We analyzed age trends by hospital type and CCC count in 1-year intervals and dichotomously (15-20 vs 21-30 years) with the Cochran-Armitage test. RESULTS: The largest change in pediatric hospitals used by AYA with CCCs occurred between 15 and 20 years with 39.7% versus 7.7% of discharges respectively (P< 0.001). For older AYA (21 to 30 years), 1.0% of discharges occurred at pediatric hospitals, compared with 65.6% at adult hospitals without pediatric services (P < 0.001). Older AYA at pediatric hospitals had more technology dependence (42.5%) versus younger AYA (27.6%, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Most discharges for AYAs ≥21 years with CCCs were from adult hospitals without pediatric services. Higher prevalence of technology dependence and neuromuscular CCCs, as well as multiple CCCs, for AYA 21-to-30 years discharged from pediatric hospitals may be related to specific care needs only found in pediatric settings and challenges transferring into adult hospital care.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineYoung adultPediatric hospitalPediatricsCross-sectional studyEmergency medicineGerontologyPathologyAdolescent and Pediatric HealthcareChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeChronic Disease Management Strategies