# Unmet environmental needs and unmet healthcare needs in a population of young adults with cerebral palsy: what the SPARCLE study tells us

**Authors:** Jonathan Rioual, Célia Perret, Catherine Arnaud, Nicolas Vidart d’Egurbide Bagazgoïtia

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fresc.2024.1294999 · Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences · 2024-02-02

## TL;DR

This study shows that social and attitudinal support, rather than physical environment, are key to meeting healthcare needs in young adults with cerebral palsy.

## Contribution

The study identifies social and attitudinal environmental factors as significant predictors of unmet healthcare needs in cerebral palsy patients.

## Key findings

- Unmet healthcare needs were strongly associated with unmet social environment needs across all interventions.
- Unmet attitudinal needs increased odds of unmet healthcare needs for speech and physiotherapy.
- Physical environment had no significant association with unmet healthcare needs.

## Abstract

Optimizing care for young adults with cerebral palsy is crucial for their physical and psychological well-being. The inadequacy of proximal environment may play a role in the provision of health services. The aim of this study is to explore the association between unmet environmental needs in the physical, social and attitudinal domains and unmet healthcare needs in four interventions: physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy and psychological counselling.

Young adults with cerebral palsy were recruited in the SPARCLE3 European multicenter cross-sectional study. Healthcare needs and coverages were assessed using the Youth Health Care, Satisfaction, Utilization and Needs questionnaire. The need and availability of environmental factors in physical, social and attitudinal domains were collected using the European Adult Environment Questionnaire. Logistic regressions were conducted separately for each intervention to measure associations between unmet environmental needs and unmet healthcare needs.

We studied 310 young adults with cerebral palsy, with a mean age of 24.3 years; 37.4% could not walk independently, 51.5% had an IQ below 70, 34.2% had severe communication difficulties. The most commonly expressed need was physiotherapy (81.6% of participants). Unmet healthcare needs were reported by 20.9%, 32.4%, 40.3% and 49.0% of participants requiring physiotherapy, occupational therapy, psychological counselling and speech therapy, respectively. The physical environment was never significantly associated with unmet healthcare needs. In contrast, the social environment was significantly associated with unmet healthcare needs across all interventions, with odds ratios over 2.5, depending on the number of unmet needs and the nature of intervention needed. With regard to the attitudinal environment, when at least one unmet attitudinal environmental need was reported, the odds of also reporting an unmet healthcare need were of 3.68 for speech therapy and 3.77 for physiotherapy. The latter association was significant only for individuals with severe motor impairment.

Our results highlight the importance of the social and attitudinal environment in meeting healthcare needs in young adults with cerebral palsy. The lack of correlation between unmet healthcare needs and the physical environment suggests that it can be partly compensated for by social support.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral palsy (MONDO:0006497)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral palsy (MESH:D002547), motor impairment (MESH:D000068079), communication difficulties (MESH:D003147)

## Full text

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10869570/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10869570