Adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities, such as autism and Down syndrome,โฏexperienceโฏsubstantially higherโฏrates of anxiety and depressionโฏthan the general population of adults,โฏresearchersโฏreported today in JAMAโฏNetwork Open.โฏโฏ
The study, based on data from 44,000โฏadults, provides the first national estimates of mental healthโฏsymptomโฏprevalence,โฏhealthcareโฏtreatment andโฏaccessโฏbarriersโฏfacingโฏthis population.โฏ
“Our findings paintโฏaโฏdistressingโฏpicture of the mental health and healthcare forโฏpeople with these disabilities in the United States,” saidโฏsenior author Dr. Dimitri Christakis, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington School of Medicine. โHistorically,โฏsociety has not taken the needs ofโฏthis populationโฏasโฏseriouslyโฏasโฏitโฏshould, so in that respect, our findingsโฏarenโtโฏsurprising. But the scaleโฏof burdenโฏis shocking.โโฏ

The study used 2021-2023 data from the National Health Interview Survey, an annual,โฏnationally representative survey conducted by the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics.โฏFrom this data,โฏ796 adults withโฏlikely intellectualโฏand developmental disabilities wereโฏidentified. They represent about 2.9 million Americans.โฏ
Theโฏresearchersโฏexaminedโฏtheir rates ofโฏdiagnosed anxiety and depression, symptom frequency and severity, medication use, therapyโฏengagementโฏand cost-related barriers to care, adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic factors.โฏThose data were contrasted with responses from 43,682 general-population adults.โฏ
Among the key findings:โฏ
Study-population adultsโฏwereโฏnine times more likely to report diagnosed anxiety (56.8% versusโฏ10.6%โฏ%) and depression (56.9%โฏversusโฏ9.9%)โฏthan general-populationโฏadults.โฏ
Daily symptom frequency was also markedly higher:โฏ48.9% ofโฏstudy-populationโฏadultsโฏexperiencedโฏdaily anxietyโฏ(versus 7.7% among general-populationโฏpeers),โฏand 24.2% experiencedโฏdaily depressionโฏ(versusโฏ1.3%).โฏ
Only 40%โฏof study-populationโฏadultsโฏreported receiving counseling or psychotherapy in the previous year, whileโฏ40% and 37% reported usingโฏpsychiatric medicationโฏfor anxiety and depression, respectively,โฏin that span.โฏThese treatment patternsโฏindicateโฏan overreliance on medicationโฏinstead of counseling, the authors said.โฏ
Study-population adults were five times more likelyโฏthan general-population peersโฏto delay therapy due to cost (17.4% vs. 3.4%) and to forgo mental health care entirely because of expense (18.6% vs. 3.2%). This finding is notable, Christakis said, โgiven that many individuals withโฏintellectual and developmental disabilitiesโฏare covered by Medicaid.โโฏโฏ
“Having insurance doesn’t automatically translate to having access,”โฏhe noted.โฏ”Our data suggest that,โฏeven with coverage,โฏpeopleโฏwith intellectual disabilitiesโฏfaceโฏsignificant out-of-pocket costs and difficulty finding providers who accept their insurance and haveโฏappropriateโฏexpertise inโฏtreating theirโฏsymptoms.”โฏ
โฏCollectively,โฏtheโฏfindingsโฏreveal nationalโฏgaps in the ability of healthcare systems to effectively serve adults withโฏintellectual and developmental disabilities, whoseโฏlifespansโฏalreadyโฏareโฏ10 to 20 yearsโฏshorter, on average, than their general-population peers, Christakis noted.โฏ
The study authors calledโฏfor several actions, among them:โฏ
Increased Medicaid reimbursement rates for mental healthโฏpractitionersโฏwhoโฏserveโฏindividuals withโฏintellectual and developmental disabilities.โฏ
Integration of disability status into routine public health surveillance.โฏ
Expansion of training programs in disability-informed mental health care.โฏ
โMost of us are keenly aware of the mental health crisis confronting U.S.โฏteenagers today. There is also one affecting people with intellectual and developmental disabilities,โโฏChristakis said.โฏ
The paper’s lead author is Anthony Osuna, a clinical psychologist and acting assistant professor of pediatrics at the UW School of Medicine.





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