Factors influencing delays in the diagnosis and treatment of bipolar disorder in adolescents and young adults: A systematic scoping review
A. Levit, J.-J. Nunez, E. Morton, K. Keramatian

TL;DR
This review explores why bipolar disorder in teens and young adults is often diagnosed and treated late, identifying factors like symptoms, patient behavior, and healthcare system issues.
Contribution
This is the first systematic scoping review to examine factors causing delays in diagnosing and treating bipolar disorder in adolescents and young adults.
Findings
Patient, illness, and healthcare provider factors contribute to delays in diagnosis and treatment.
Delays occur in illness appraisal, help-seeking, diagnosis, and treatment phases.
The study highlights knowledge gaps and informs future research and clinical practice.
Abstract
Bipolar Disorder (BD) is a complex psychiatric condition that typically manifests during late adolescence and early adulthood. Over the past two decades, international studies have reported that BD often goes unrecognized and untreated for several years, which can lead to negative clinical and functional outcomes. However, the components of delay in the diagnosis and treatment of BD in adolescents and young adults and various factors influencing those components have not been systematically explored. To determine the known factors that contribute to delays in the treatment of BD in adolescents and young adults and identify current knowledge gaps. A conceptual framework based on the Model of Pathways to Treatment by Scott and colleagues was used as a foundation for our search and extraction strategy to ensure all components of delay and potential factors influencing each component are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
