Paediatric to adult transition care for patients with sickle cell disease: a global perspective

Abstract

Sickle cell disease is a life-threatening inherited condition designated as a public health priority by WHO. Increased longevity of patients with sickle cell disease in high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries present unprecedented challenges for all settings; however, a globally standardised solution for patient transition from paediatric to adult sickle cell disease health care is unlikely to address the challenges. We established a task force of experts from a multicountry (the USA, Europe, Middle East, and Africa) consortium. We combined themes from the literature with viewpoints from members of the task force and invited experts to provide a global overview of transition care practice, highlighting barriers to effective transition care and provide baseline recommendations that can be adapted to local needs. We highlighted priorities to consider for any young person with sickle cell disease transitioning from paediatric to adult health care: skills transfer, increasing self-efficacy, coordination, knowledge transfer, linking to adult services, and evaluating readiness (the SICKLE recommendations). These recommendations aim to ensure appropriate benchmarking of transition programming, but multisite prospective studies are needed to address this growing public health need. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd

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Keywords

Advisory committees, Anemia, sickle cell, Child, Delivery of health care, Humans, Knowledge management, Self efficacy, Transition to adult care, Benchmarking, Decision making, Disease burden, Education, Follow up, Genetics, Health care access, Health care cost, Health care personnel, Health care quality, Health care system, Health care utilization, Hematology, High income country, Knowledge, Low income country, Medical education, Middle income country, Mortality, Pediatrics, Practice guideline, Primary medical care, Priority journal, Public health, Quality of life, Review, Risk factor, Sickle cell anemia, Total quality management, Training, Advisory committee, Health care delivery, Human, Pathology, Self concept

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