Progress or Precipice? – A Service Evaluation of a Specialist Eating Disorder Unit Serving Both Adolescents and Adults
Giles Glass, Lara Harrison, Val Yeung

TL;DR
This paper evaluates a specialist eating disorder unit that helps young people transition from adolescent to adult mental health services without disrupting their treatment.
Contribution
The study presents a rare inpatient model that allows uninterrupted care during the transition from CAMHS to adult services for eating disorder patients.
Findings
Cotswold Spa Hospital provides inpatient treatment for both adolescents and adults in the same facility, allowing seamless transition at age 18.
Four patients transitioned from CAMHS to adult services at the hospital without treatment interruption in the last year.
Such a model is rare in the UK and addresses a critical gap in eating disorder care during the transition period.
Abstract
Aims: There is good qualitative evidence in the literature of the challenges of transition from Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) to Adult services at aged 18 faced by young people, their families or carers and professionals. Eating disorders typically present in adolescents and persist into early adulthood with an average age of onset at around age 18. This population is therefore often faced with the challenge of transitioning between services during periods of treatment. Some community eating disorder teams in the UK have started to move towards an all-age model, however, inpatient services do not seem to have kept pace with this change. Methods: A literature search using PubMed was conducted to identify any publications relating to the transition between CAMHS and adult services in eating disorder treatment. An evaluation of the service at Cotswold Spa Hospital…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdolescent and Pediatric Healthcare · Child and Adolescent Health · Research in Social Sciences
