Engaging with and Assessing the Adolescent Patient
Key Points
Adolescence is a transitional phase between childhood and adulthood, historically spanning ages 12-18 but now including young adulthood up to 25 years.
Adolescents have the legal right to confidential health care.
Adolescents less than 18 years old may be considered ‘mature minors’ and can give informed consent.
The HEEADSSS interview is crucial for psychosocial screening in adolescent assessments.
Background
What is Adolescence?
Traditionally, adolescence covers ages 12–18, from pubertal onset to legal independence.
Recently, it includes young adulthood up to 25 years.
Adolescent Health Care Considerations
Increased risk-taking behaviors and psychosocial issues contribute to morbidity and mortality.
Adolescents rarely access routine health care, making any contact an opportunity for preventative care.
Some health services transition those aged >16 to adult services; transition planning should start before age 18.
Assessment
Consultation Structure:
Include time with both the adolescent and guardian together, and time with the adolescent alone.
Confidentiality and Consent:
Explicitly discuss confidentiality and obtain permission before contacting other professionals.
Adolescents can receive confidential health care unless they are not mature minors or there are significant risk concerns.
Mature minors can give informed consent based on their understanding and intelligence (Gillick competency).
Most 16-18-year-olds are presumed mature minors, but younger adolescents may also be considered based on the intervention’s nature.
Special considerations are needed for adolescents involved with child protection services.
Psychosocial Interview
HEEADSSS Interview:
Home: Who they live with, relationships, stress, violence, smartphone/computer use.
Safety: Serious injuries, online safety, exposure to violence, criminal behaviors.
Interview Tips:
Use open-ended, non-judgmental questions.
Preface with confidentiality and the purpose of personal questions.
Focus on the most relevant areas for the patient.
Conclude by asking the adolescent about their trusted confidants.
Examination
General Considerations:
Use a chaperone.
Ensure privacy.
Consider self-assessment for pubertal staging (Tanner staging).
Management
General Considerations:
Management depends on issues identified during the psychosocial interview.
Health concerns can be categorized as risk or protective factors.
Immediate management plans for significant health risks may include mental health assessments and possible admission.
Document the adolescent’s contact details for follow-up.
Consider opportunistic vaccination.
Medicare Cards:
Encourage those over 15 years to obtain their own Medicare card.
Transition to Adult Services
Transition planning should start in mid-adolescence with formal support and education.
Aim to transition by 18 or after high school completion.
Complex cases may need overlapping pediatric and adult services for safe transition.
Consult local pediatric teams for adolescents at significant risk; mental health, adolescent medicine, or social work teams may be more appropriate based on the presentation.