Healthcare costs for adults with autism more than double those for general population

Cost of autism

Cost of autism

 

 

 

 

 

 

Researchers compared total annual healthcare costs for adults on the autism spectrum to costs for adults with attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and adults in the general population and found them to be 20% and 70% higher, respectively. Adults on the spectrum also had increased use of specific services, such as primary care, mental health, and laboratory services, but lower use of gynecology visits and screening for cervical cancer. The study, “Healthcare Service Utilization and Cost Among Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorders in a U.S. Integrated Healthcare System,” was coauthored by Ousseny Zerbo, PhD, and colleagues from Kaiser Permanente Northern California, Oakland and Santa Rosa, and is published in the preview issue of Autism in Adulthood, a new peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The preview issue is available free on Autism in Adulthood website.

“Most of what we know about autism comes from research on children. Zerbo and colleagues’ study–the largest to date looking at the healthcare utilization of adults on the autism spectrum–highlights the importance of considering autism throughout the lifespan,” says Christina Nicolaidis, MD, MPH, Portland State University and Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon and Editor-in-Chief of Autism in Adulthood.

 

Additional articles in the preview issue include two perspectives that envision a way to ad-dress the health disparities experienced by adults on the autism spectrum. “Community Mental Health Services for Autistic Adults: Good News and Bad News” focuses on the cur-rent state of community mental health services in the U.S. for autistic adults who have co-occurring psychiatric conditions, such as depression or anxiety. Coauthors Brenna Mad-dox, PhD, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Va-lerie Gaus, PhD, a licensed clinical psychologist in Huntington, NY, highlight recent posi-tive developments, summarize continuing barriers to providing affordable mental health care for this patient population, and provide recommendations for patients and their fami-lies, clinicians, and health system administrators.

In “Workshop Report: Establishing Priority Research Areas to Improve the Physical Health and Well-Being of Autistic Adults and Older People,” coauthors Georgina Warner, PhD and James Cusack, PhD, Autistica, London, U.K. and Jeremy Parr, MD, Newcastle Uni-versity, Newcastle upon Tyne, U.K. present the results of a collaborative workshop de-signed to identify priority research areas for improving the physical health and well-being of adults with autism.

“Both of these perspectives articles help us envision a path forward to addressing the health needs of adults on the autism spectrum,” says Dr. Nicolaidis. “These discussions capitalize on the experience and wisdom of researchers, clinicians, autistic adults, and families. Autism in Adulthood will serve as a home for such dialogue – and for the research and scholarship that is necessary to allow all autistic adults to lead healthy, fulfilling lives.”