TY - JOUR
T1 - Pediatric to Adult Transition Literature
T2 - Scoping Review and Rheumatology Research Prioritization Survey Results
AU - Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance (CARRA) Transition Workgroup
AU - Bitencourt, Nicole
AU - Lawson, Erica
AU - Bridges, John
AU - Carandang, Kristine
AU - Chintagunta, Ela
AU - Chiraseveenuprapund, Peter
AU - DeQuattro, Kimberly
AU - Goh, Y. Ingrid
AU - Lee, Tzielan C.
AU - Moore, Katharine F.
AU - Peterson, Rosemary G.
AU - Roberts, Jordan E.
AU - Ronis, Tova
AU - Sadun, Rebecca E.
AU - Smitherman, Emily A.
AU - Stringer, Elizabeth
AU - White, Patience H.
AU - Chang, Joyce C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 by the Journal of Rheumatology.
PY - 2022/11/1
Y1 - 2022/11/1
N2 - The transition from pediatric to adult care is the focus of growing research. It is important to identify how to direct future research efforts for maximum effect. Our goals were to perform a scoping review of the transition literature, highlight gaps in transition research, and offer stakeholder guidance on the importance and feasibility of research questions designed to fill identified gaps. The transition literature on rheumatic diseases and other common pediatric-onset chronic diseases was grouped and summarized. Based on the findings, a survey was developed and disseminated to pediatric rheumatologists and young adults with rheumatic diseases as well as their caregivers. The transitional care needs of patients, healthcare teams, and caregivers is well described in the literature. While various transition readiness scales exist, no longitudinal posttransfer study confirms their predictive validity. Multiple outcome measures are used alone or in combination to define a successful transition or intervention. Multimodal interventions are most effective at improving transition-related outcomes. How broader health policy affects transition is poorly studied. Research questions that ranked highest for importance and feasibility included those related to identifying and tracking persons with psychosocial vulnerabilities or other risk factors for poor outcomes. Interventions surrounding improving self-efficacy and health literacy were also ranked highly. In contrast to healthcare teams (n = 107), young adults/caregivers (n = 23) prioritized research surrounding improved work, school, or social function. The relevant transition literature is summarized and future research questions prioritized, including the creation of processes to identify and support young adults vulnerable to poor outcomes.
AB - The transition from pediatric to adult care is the focus of growing research. It is important to identify how to direct future research efforts for maximum effect. Our goals were to perform a scoping review of the transition literature, highlight gaps in transition research, and offer stakeholder guidance on the importance and feasibility of research questions designed to fill identified gaps. The transition literature on rheumatic diseases and other common pediatric-onset chronic diseases was grouped and summarized. Based on the findings, a survey was developed and disseminated to pediatric rheumatologists and young adults with rheumatic diseases as well as their caregivers. The transitional care needs of patients, healthcare teams, and caregivers is well described in the literature. While various transition readiness scales exist, no longitudinal posttransfer study confirms their predictive validity. Multiple outcome measures are used alone or in combination to define a successful transition or intervention. Multimodal interventions are most effective at improving transition-related outcomes. How broader health policy affects transition is poorly studied. Research questions that ranked highest for importance and feasibility included those related to identifying and tracking persons with psychosocial vulnerabilities or other risk factors for poor outcomes. Interventions surrounding improving self-efficacy and health literacy were also ranked highly. In contrast to healthcare teams (n = 107), young adults/caregivers (n = 23) prioritized research surrounding improved work, school, or social function. The relevant transition literature is summarized and future research questions prioritized, including the creation of processes to identify and support young adults vulnerable to poor outcomes.
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U2 - 10.3899/jrheum.220262
DO - 10.3899/jrheum.220262
M3 - Review article
C2 - 35914787
AN - SCOPUS:85141044507
SN - 0315-162X
VL - 49
SP - 1201
EP - 1213
JO - Journal of Rheumatology
JF - Journal of Rheumatology
IS - 11
ER -