# Transition from child to adult health services for young people with cerebral palsy in Ireland; implications from a mixed-methods study

**Authors:** Jennifer M. Ryan, Meriel Norris, Aisling Walsh, Amanda Breen, Owen Hensey, Claire Kerr, Sebastian Koppe, Grace Lavelle, Mary Owens, Michael Walsh, Thilo Kroll, Jennifer Fortune, Cristina Sarmiento, Jennifer M. Ryan, Gavin Colquitt, Jennifer M. Ryan

PMC · DOI: 10.12688/hrbopenres.13912.1 · 2024-07-17

## TL;DR

This study examines how young people with cerebral palsy in Ireland transition from child to adult healthcare, finding gaps in support and suggesting improvements.

## Contribution

The study integrates mixed-methods data to identify specific transition gaps and proposes actionable implications for improving healthcare transitions.

## Key findings

- Lack of a named worker and limited information provision during transition were identified as key issues.
- There was dissonance in findings regarding parental involvement and silence on health self-efficacy promotion.
- Implications suggest the need for standardized pathways and collaborative information sharing.

## Abstract

Poor transition from child- to adult-oriented healthcare may lead to negative outcomes and dissatisfaction with services in adulthood. The aim of the study was to examine how transition is provided to and experienced by young people with CP in Ireland. This report provides integrated quantitative and qualitative findings and implications based on the totality of knowledge generated.

A convergent parallel mixed-methods study was conducted. Data were collected from people with CP aged 16-22 years, parents, and health professionals using surveys and semi-structured interviews, informed by a framework of nine key transition practices. Quantitative and qualitative findings were integrated at the interpretation stage of the research using integration through joint displays. Implications were developed through discussions with health professionals, young people, and parents.

Surveys were completed by 75 young people/parents and 108 health professionals. Interviews were conducted with 13 young people, 14 parents, and 27 health professionals. There was complementarity between quantitative and qualitative findings indicating lack of a named worker, limited information provision, insufficient self-management support, no opportunity to meet the adult team, limited contact with the GP, and no opportunity for attending formal life skills training. There was dissonance between quantitative and qualitative findings regarding appropriate level of parental involvement. There was silence between quantitative and qualitative findings for promotion of health self-efficacy and senior manager responsible for transition, with quantitative findings indicating these were not present for most young people, but qualitative findings not describing these practices

Implications of integrated findings include the need for a standardised transition pathway, intentional actions to enable parents and young people to adapt to changing roles, provision of information in a collaborative and phased approach, a common understanding of self-management between young people, parents and health professionals, and the need to involve adults’ services and GPs in transition.

## Linked entities

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

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cerebral palsy (MESH:D002547)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11875073