Abstract

Most adolescents are placed in residential youth care (RYC) because of severe psychosocial strains and child maltreatment, which represent risk factors for developing mental disorders. To plan RYC units and ensure that residents receive evidence-based psychiatric interventions, it is necessary to obtain reliable and valid prevalence estimates of mental disorders in this population. However, there is a lacuna of research on diagnoses derived from standardized clinical interviews. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence and comorbidity of mental disorders applying diagnostic interviews in an entire population of adolescents living in RYC in Norway. All young people in RYC were invited to participate in the study. Eighty-six RYC institutions with 601 eligible adolescents were included and 400 adolescents, 12–20 years old, participated in the study, yielding a response rate of 67 %. Anonymous Child Behaviour Checklist scores for 141 (70 %) of the declining residents were also available, allowing diagnoses according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) for 541 youths to be estimated. Diagnoses were assessed by trained interviewers with the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment interview (CAPA). Seventy-six point two per cent (71.5–80.8 CI 95 %) of adolescents received at least one 3-month DSM-IV diagnosis. Prevalence rates for internalizing psychiatric disorders were higher than for behavioural disorders. Comorbidity was high between these two groups. Mental disorders were prevalent among children and youth in RYC. Our results create major concerns and challenge the existing organization of the RYC system.

Highlights

  • Most adolescents are placed in residential youth care (RYC) because of severe psychosocial strains and child maltreatment, which are well known as risk factors for developing mental disorder [1]

  • To plan RYC units and provide evidence-based and individually tailored psychiatric interventions for adolescents living in RYC, it is necessary that knowledge based on reliable and valid prevalence estimates of mental disorders and their comorbidity is available

  • This observed prevalence rate was confirmed by multiple imputation (MI) estimation among 400 participants combined with Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL) information of 141 non-participants, showing a prevalence rate of 76.0 % (N = 541)

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Summary

Introduction

Most adolescents are placed in residential youth care (RYC) because of severe psychosocial strains and child maltreatment, which are well known as risk factors for developing mental disorder [1]. To plan RYC units and provide evidence-based and individually tailored psychiatric interventions for adolescents living in RYC, it is necessary that knowledge based on reliable and valid prevalence estimates of mental disorders and their comorbidity is available. Providing adequate help for adolescents with mental disorders who are living in RYC units is important in a social–economic cost–benefit perspective, because adolescents in the child welfare system have major difficulties in school functioning and completing education [3,4,5] and are at higher risk for substance abuse and criminal behaviour [6,7,8,9], thereby generating social costs [2, 10]

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