Diabetes Care 30:2441-2446, 2007 DOI: 10.2337/dc07-1249 © 2007 by the American Diabetes Association
Transitioning From Pediatric to Adult CareA new approach to the post-adolescent young person with type 1 diabetes
1 Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Jill Weissberg-Benchell, Children's Memorial Hospital, Dept. of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2300 Childrens Plaza, Box 10, Chicago, IL 60614. E-mail: jwbenchell@childrensmemorial.org
Abbreviations: DCCT, Diabetes Control and Complications Trial SES, socioeconomic status
Diabetes research and health care have traditionally been divided into two distinct areas for receiving medical care: pediatric and adult. We propose a fresh approach to providing care in which we consider the period of development after high school as a period of "emerging adulthood" for youth with diabetes. We argue that the traditional conceptualization of only two distinct groups of patients misses the unique personal needs of individuals immediately post–high school. We frame this discussion about the needs of these post–high school patients ( An updated theory of the developmental period after adolescence
Over the past century, traditional developmental psychology defined the time immediately after adolescence as the "young adult period" (3,4). In contrast, a leading contemporary developmental theorist (1,2) has argued that young adulthood does not begin until youth are in their late twenties or thirties and that the developmental stage between "explore the possibilities available to them in love andPsychosocial research with youth with type 1 diabetes after adolescence Type 1 diabetes during the past-adolescent period Clinical implications. Guideline development
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||