Abstract

BackgroundRelative to their counterparts in the general population, young people who leave, or transition out of, out-of-home (OOHC) arrangements commonly experience poorer outcomes across a range of indicators, including higher rates of homelessness, unemployment, reliance on public assistance, physical and mental health problems and contact with the criminal justice system. The age at which young people transition from OOHC varies between and within some countries, but for most, formal support ceases between the ages of 18 and 21.Programs designed to support transitions are generally available to young people toward the end of their OOHC placement, although some can extend beyond. They often encourage the development of skills required for continued engagement in education, obtaining employment, maintaining housing and general life skills. Little is known about the effectiveness of these programs or of extended care policies that raise the age at which support remains available to young people after leaving OOHC. This systematic review will seek to identify programs and/or interventions that improve outcomes for youth transitioning from the OOHC system into adult living arrangements.MethodsThis review will identify programs, interventions and policies that seek to improve health and wellbeing of this population that have been tested using robust controlled methods. Primary outcomes of interest are homelessness, health, education, employment, exposure to violence and risky behaviour. Secondary outcomes are relationships and life skills. We will search, from January 1990 onwards, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, ERIC, CINAHL, Cochrane CENTRAL, SocINDEX, Sociological s, Social Services s, NHS Economic Evaluation Database and Health Technology Assessment. Grey literature will be identified through searching websites and databases, e.g. clearing houses, government agencies and organisations known to be undertaking or consolidating research on this topic area. Two reviewers will independently screen all title and abstracts and full text articles with conflicts to be resolved by a third reviewer. Data extraction will be undertaken by pairs of review authors, with one reviewer checking the results of the other. If more than one study with suitable data can be identified, we plan to undertake both fixed-effects and random-effects meta-analyses and intend to present the random-effects result if there is no indication of funnel plot asymmetry. Risk of bias will be assessed using tools appropriate to the study methodology. Quality of evidence across studies will be assessed using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology.DiscussionPrevious reviews were unable to identify any programs or interventions, backed by methodologically rigorous research, that improve outcomes for this population. This review seeks to update this previous work, taking into account changes in the provision of extended care, which is now available in some jurisdictions.Systematic review registrationPROSPERO CRD42020146999

Highlights

  • Relative to their counterparts in the general population, young people who leave, or transition out of, out-of-home (OOHC) arrangements commonly experience poorer outcomes across a range of indicators, including higher rates of homelessness, unemployment, reliance on public assistance, physical and mental health problems and contact with the criminal justice system

  • out-of-home care (OOHC) takes three major forms: foster care—where care services are provided by individuals not necessarily known to the recipient, kinship care—where those providing care are connected to the recipient through blood or kin ties, and residential care—where care is provided in an institutional setting

  • Young people who leave or transition out of OOHC arrangements commonly experience poorer outcomes compared to the general population across a range of indicators, including higher rates of homelessness, unemployment, reliance on public assistance, physical and mental health problems and contact with the criminal justice system [10,11,12,13,14,15,16]

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Summary

Methods

The systematic review has been registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO, http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO, registration number: CRD42020146999). If more than one study with suitable data can be identified, we intend to perform a meta-analysis if the population, intervention, comparison and outcomes are similar enough to be reasonably combined or can be standardised for comparison. To make this judgement, we will group included studies by outcome domain and study design, whilst considering the intervention type, population, comparator, outcome measure and timing of outcome measurement. We plan to undertake both fixed-effects and randomeffects meta-analyses and intend to present the randomeffects result if there is no indication of funnel plot asymmetry These models will allow us to estimate the pooled effect size and its 95% confidence interval for each outcome. Results synthesised by outcome domain, stratified by study design,

Discussion
Background
Study design
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