Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
R M Viner Department of Medicine, University College London, London
W1T 3AA
R.Viner{at}ich.ucl.ac.uk
In contrast to North America and Australia, little
attention has been paid to the use of health services by adolescents in the United Kingdom. The incidence of survival from chronic illness in
young people is increasing. The care of adolescents is becoming a
quality issue for the NHS.
1 2
Health data are rarely
available in the United Kingdom on adolescents as a separate group,
with standard data dividing young people into those aged under 14 years or those aged 15-44 years.3 A study of the use of
psychiatric beds by adolescents in England and Wales is presently being
undertaken by the Royal College of Psychiatrists (A O'Herlihy,
personal communication). Previous regional studies have been
undertaken,
4 5
but reliable national data to guide the
provision of other hospital services to adolescents are not available.
I requested information on the numbers of hospital bed days of
inpatients and day case patients aged 12 to 19 years from April 1997 to
March 1998 from all health authorities and boards in Wales and Scotland
and 27 randomly selected ones from England. I excluded admissions for
obstetrics, mental health, and learning disabilities. Information was
provided by 37 health authorities and boards (response rate 79%),
including three of the five in Wales, all 15 health boards in Scotland,
and 19 English health authorities and boards, including at least one
from each of the eight English regions. Information from three health authorities and boards was unusable. Average bed days was calculated by summing data from all 34 included health authorities and boards (population 15.8 million). I used two
sample t tests to analyse differences in means. Data were normally distributed.
![]()
Participants, methods, and results
Top
Participants, methods, and...
Comment
References

View larger version (38K):
[in a new window]
Bed days of adolescent inpatients and day case patients per 10 000 population by age and sex
Total inpatient bed days per 10 000 people increased significantly from 17.0 (SD 7.4) at 12 years to 24.6 (SD 7.7) at 19 years (t=-4.5, P<0.000) (figure). Bed days for males were significantly higher than females at age 12 years; however, bed usage by females surpassed that of males from 17 years. Bed days for females but not males increased significantly during adolescence. Total bed days of day cases per 10 000 people increased significantly from 2.32 (SD 1.82) at 12 years to 4.31 (SD 1.38) at 19 years (t=-6.8, P<0.000). I found no increase in bed days of male day cases during adolescence, however in females bed days increased significantly between 12 and 19 years. Females used significantly more bed days as day cases than did males from 16 years onwards. Bed day usage (inpatient and day case) was not related to the population of the health authority.
Data from all Scottish health boards (population 5.2 million) allowed
calculations of the use of inpatient beds per 10 000 people of a
specific age. Bed day use increased significantly from 1604.2 (SD
100.5) per 10 000 12 year olds to 2099.4 (SD 82.1) per 10 000 19 year olds (t=-3.4, P<0.005). I found no significant differences between sexes. Total inpatient bed use was 3732.5 per 10 000 young people aged 12-19 years.
| |
Comment |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Adolescents aged 12 to 19 years occupy an average of 18 inpatient
beds and 2.2 day case beds in a district general hospital nominally
serving 250 000 people. The use of hospital beds increases rather than
decreases through adolescence. This contradicts the assumption that
adolescents use hospitals rarely and do not merit separate facilities.
An average district general hospital has the activity to support a ward
for adolescents of 12 to 15 beds. Overall, 12.8 inpatient beds are
required for each 10 000 adolescents aged 12 to 19 years in the
hospital catchment area (based on standard assumptions of an 80% bed
occupancy). Although dedicated wards for adolescents may not be
possible in many hospitals, the provision of other facilities should be considered.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. |
Viner R.
Transition from paediatric to adult care. Bridging the gaps or passing the buck?
Arch Dis Child
1999;
81:
271-275 |
| 2. | House of Commons Select Committee on Health. The specific health needs of children and young people: House of Commons Select Committee on health, fifth report of session 1996-96. London: Stationery Office, 1997:xl. |
| 3. | Health and personal social services statistics for England. London: Stationery Office, 1999. |
| 4. | British Paediatric Association. Report of the working party on the needs and care of adolescents. London: BPA, 1985. |
| 5. | Henderson J, Goldacre M, Yeates D. Use of hospital in patient care in adolescence. Arch Dis Child 1993; 169: 559-563. |
(Accepted 18 December 2000)
Read all Rapid Responses