Adherence to therapy of patients with adolescent depression
V. Kaleda, M. Omelchenko

TL;DR
This study examines why adolescents with depression stop their treatment after hospital discharge, finding that many discontinue therapy prematurely due to stigma, side effects, or family opposition.
Contribution
The study provides empirical data on adherence rates and reasons for discontinuation in adolescent depression treatment post-hospitalization.
Findings
33.9% of patients refused therapy within 30 days after discharge.
Main reasons for discontinuation included stigma, side effects, and family opposition.
Only 12.1% of patients were fully compliant with prescribed treatment.
Abstract
Therapy of adolescent depression is accompanied by a number of difficulties associated with the influence of the age factor, which include the following aspects: social - with the possibility of forming a fear of stigmatization, biological – with low tolerance of psychopharmacological agents due to the immaturity of the functional systems of the body, psychological – with a combination of oppositional behavior of adolescents and their desire to “be like everyone else”. All these factors may lead to a decrease in patients’ compliance in the treatment of adolescent depression and premature refusal to continue treatment, which may provoke a relapse of the disorder. To assess the adherence of adolescent patients with a first depressive episode regarding the continuation of therapy after discharge from the hospital. 124 patients (average age – 19.4) were examined after discharge from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
