A national profile of Tourette syndrome, 2011-2012

Rebecca H Bitsko, Joseph R Holbrook, Susanna N Visser, Jonathan W Mink, Samuel H Zinner, Reem M Ghandour, Stephen J Blumberg, Rebecca H Bitsko, Joseph R Holbrook, Susanna N Visser, Jonathan W Mink, Samuel H Zinner, Reem M Ghandour, Stephen J Blumberg

Abstract

Objective: To provide recent estimates of the prevalence of Tourette syndrome among a nationally representative sample of US children and to describe the association of Tourette syndrome with indicators of health and functioning.

Methods: Data on 65,540 US children aged 6 to 17 years from the 2011-2012 National Survey of Children's Health were analyzed. Parents reported whether a health care provider had ever told them their child had Tourette syndrome or other neurobehavioral or chronic health conditions and whether their child had current Tourette syndrome.

Results: Based on parents' report, 0.19% of US children had Tourette syndrome; the average age of diagnosis was 8.1 years. Children with Tourette syndrome, compared with those without, were more likely to have co-occurring neurobehavioral and other health conditions, meet criteria for designation as having a special health care need, receive mental health treatment, have unmet mental health care needs, and have parents with high parenting aggravation and parents who were contacted about school problems; they were less likely to receive effective care coordination or have a medical home. After controlling for co-occurring neurobehavioral conditions, the findings on parents being contacted about school problems and children having unmet mental health care needs were no longer significant.

Conclusions: Tourette syndrome is characterized by co-occurring neurobehavioral and other health conditions, and poorer health, education, and family relationships. The findings support previous recommendations to consider co-occurring conditions in the diagnosis and treatment of Tourette syndrome. Future research may explore whether having a medical home improves outcomes among children with Tourette syndrome.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: All authors report no conflicts of interest.

Source: PubMed

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