title: "Adolescent Health"
Adolescent Health
Comprehensive guide to adolescent medicine including psychosocial assessment, developmental considerations, and common presentations.
Approach to Adolescents
Developmental Considerations
Adolescence stages:
| Stage | Age | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Early | 10-13 years | Puberty onset, concrete thinking, peer groups forming |
| Middle | 14-16 years | Abstract thinking emerging, identity exploration, risk-taking peak |
| Late | 17-21 years | Future orientation, autonomy, stable identity |
Adolescent brain development: Prefrontal cortex (judgement, impulse control) not fully mature until mid-20s. Limbic system (emotion, reward) develops earlier, explaining risk-taking behaviour.
Principles of Adolescent Care
- Confidentiality: Explain limits clearly at start
- Respect autonomy: Include them in decisions
- Non-judgemental approach: Avoid lecturing
- See alone: Part of consultation without parents
- Explain process: What you're doing and why
- Be honest: About what you can and can't keep confidential
Limits of Confidentiality
Must break confidentiality for:
- Risk to self (active suicidal intent)
- Risk to others
- Child abuse disclosure
- Reportable conditions
Mature minor doctrine: Adolescents who demonstrate sufficient understanding can consent to treatment without parental involvement. Assess competence case-by-case.
HEADSS Assessment
Home Education/Employment Activities Drugs Sexuality Suicide/Depression/Safety
Home
- Who lives at home? Family structure
- Relationships with family members
- Recent changes (separation, new partners, moves)
- Where do you feel safe?
- Any conflict at home?
Education/Employment
- What school/year level?
- Favourite subjects? Subjects struggling with?
- Plans for the future?
- Part-time job?
- Any problems at school? Bullying?
- Absenteeism?
Activities
- What do you do for fun?
- Sports, hobbies, creative activities?
- Friends - how many, how close?
- Screen time - social media, gaming?
- Exercise frequency?
Drugs
- Have friends tried cigarettes, vaping, alcohol, drugs?
- Have you tried any? (normalise: "many young people experiment")
- What have you tried? How often?
- Any problems related to use?
- Driving after drinking?
Sexuality
- Are you in a relationship?
- Have you ever been in a relationship? Been sexual with anyone?
- Attracted to boys, girls, both, unsure?
- Any concerns about your body or gender?
- (If sexually active): Contraception? STI prevention?
- Ever felt pressured or unsafe?
Suicide/Depression/Safety
- How's your mood been lately?
- Ever felt so down that you thought life wasn't worth living?
- Ever hurt yourself on purpose?
- Ever thought about suicide? Made a plan?
- Do you feel safe at home? At school? Online?
- Has anyone ever hurt you or touched you inappropriately?
Ask directly about suicide: Direct questions don't increase suicide risk. Asking shows you're taking their distress seriously and opens dialogue.
Eating Disorders in Adolescents
Warning Signs
- Weight loss or failure to gain weight during growth
- Preoccupation with food, calories, weight
- Excessive exercise
- Avoiding meals, eating alone
- Food restriction, food rules
- Purging behaviours (bathroom after meals, laxatives)
- Body image distortion
SCOFF Screening
One point for each "yes":
- Do you make yourself Sick because you feel uncomfortably full?
- Do you worry you've lost Control over how much you eat?
- Have you recently lost more than One stone (6 kg) in 3 months?
- Do you believe yourself to be Fat when others say you're thin?
- Would you say Food dominates your life?
Score ≥2: High likelihood of eating disorder
Medical Complications
Red flags for medical admission:
- HR <50 bpm
- BP <80/50 mmHg
- Orthostatic changes (HR increase >20 or BP drop >20 on standing)
- Severe electrolyte disturbance
- Temperature <35.5°C
- BMI <75% expected for age
- Rapid weight loss (>1 kg/week)
- Failure of outpatient management
Source: RCH eating disorder medical admission criteria; local paediatric guideline.
Management Principles
- Medical stabilisation first
- Family-Based Treatment (FBT) - first-line for adolescents
- Nutritional rehabilitation
- Psychological support
- Monitor for refeeding syndrome
Refeeding syndrome: Risk highest in first 2 weeks of nutritional rehabilitation. Monitor phosphate, potassium, magnesium. Start low, increase gradually.
Substance Use in Adolescents
Patterns of Use
| Pattern | Description |
|---|---|
| Experimentation | Trying substances, often with peers |
| Occasional use | Irregular, social situations |
| Regular use | Established pattern, may affect functioning |
| Problematic use | Causing harm, dependence features |
Common Substances
Alcohol: Most commonly used. Binge drinking pattern common.
Cannabis: Second most common. Associated with psychosis risk, amotivation.
Vaping/Nicotine: Rapidly increasing. Gateway concern. Lung injury risk (EVALI).
Other: Inhalants, pharmaceuticals, MDMA, stimulants.
Brief Intervention
ASSIST-Linked Brief Intervention:
- Provide feedback on screening score
- Discuss personal risks
- Explore readiness to change
- Advise on reducing harm
- Provide resources
- Arrange follow-up
Motivational interviewing with adolescents: Autonomy is key. Explore their perspective before offering advice. Ask permission: "Would it be okay if I shared some information?"
Sexual Health
Confidentiality and Consent
- Adolescents can consent to sexual health services
- Confidential - parents do not need to be informed
- Exceptions: abuse, safety concerns, very young age
Contraception Options
| Method | Advantages | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Condoms | STI protection, accessible | User-dependent |
| OCP | Cycle control, acne | Daily compliance, VTE risk |
| Implant (Implanon) | Long-acting (3 years), very effective | Insertion procedure, irregular bleeding |
| IUD | Long-acting (5-10 years), very effective | Insertion procedure |
| Depo-Provera | 3-monthly injection | Bone density concerns with prolonged use |
| ECP | Emergency use | Not for regular use |
LARC methods (implants, IUDs): Recommended for adolescents due to high efficacy independent of compliance. Safe and appropriate first-line options.
STI Screening
Who to screen:
- Sexually active adolescents
- New partner in last 12 months
- Multiple partners
- Partner with STI
- Symptoms
What to test:
- Urine NAAT for chlamydia and gonorrhoea (first-void)
- Throat and rectal swabs if relevant exposures
- Blood for syphilis, HIV, Hepatitis B (serology)
Chlamydia: Most common bacterial STI. Often asymptomatic. Major cause of PID and infertility if untreated. Treat with azithromycin 1g single dose.
Source: Therapeutic Guidelines (eTG); local sexual health guidance.
Mental Health in Adolescents
Prevalence
- 1 in 7 adolescents experience mental health disorder
- 50% of adult mental illness starts by age 14
- Depression and anxiety most common
- Self-harm increasingly prevalent
Depression in Adolescents
Presentation differs from adults:
- Irritability more common than sadness
- Somatic complaints
- Academic decline
- Social withdrawal
- Behavioural problems
Assessment:
- Screen with PHQ-A or similar
- Full HEADSS assessment
- Risk assessment (self-harm, suicide)
- Consider substance use
- Rule out medical causes
Management:
| Severity | Approach |
|---|---|
| Mild | Active monitoring, lifestyle, psychoeducation |
| Moderate | Psychological therapy (CBT, IPT-A) |
| Severe | Medication (fluoxetine first-line) + therapy |
Anxiety Disorders
Common presentations:
- Social anxiety (fear of judgement)
- Generalised anxiety (worry about everything)
- Panic disorder
- School refusal
Management:
- CBT (exposure-based)
- Relaxation techniques
- SSRIs for moderate-severe
Self-Harm
Non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI):
- Cutting, burning, hitting, scratching
- Usually for emotional regulation
- Different from suicide attempt but a risk factor
Assessment:
- Non-judgemental approach
- Understand function (emotion regulation, communication)
- Assess suicide risk
- Safety planning
- Address underlying issues
All self-harm should be taken seriously: NSSI increases suicide risk. Assess lethality and intent but never dismiss "superficial" injuries.
Acne
Pathophysiology
- Increased sebum production (androgens)
- Follicular hyperkeratinisation
- Cutibacterium acnes colonisation
- Inflammation
Severity Classification
| Mild | Moderate | Severe |
|---|---|---|
| Comedones | Papules, pustules | Nodules, cysts |
| Few inflammatory lesions | Moderate inflammatory lesions | Widespread, scarring |
Management
| Severity | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Mild | Topical: benzoyl peroxide, retinoids, or combination |
| Moderate | Topical combination + oral antibiotics (doxycycline) |
| Severe/Nodular | Oral isotretinoin (specialist) |
Isotretinoin: Highly effective but significant side effects. Teratogenic - requires strict contraception in females. Monitor LFTs, lipids, mood.
Chronic Fatigue
Approach to Fatigue in Adolescents
Organic causes to exclude:
- Anaemia
- Thyroid dysfunction
- Infectious mononucleosis
- Diabetes
- Coeliac disease
- Inflammatory conditions
Lifestyle factors:
- Sleep (quantity, quality, schedule)
- Screen time and sleep hygiene
- Physical activity
- Diet and hydration
Psychosocial factors:
- Depression, anxiety
- School stress
- Social difficulties
- Family issues
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS/ME)
Criteria:
- Fatigue >6 months
- Post-exertional malaise
- Unrefreshing sleep
- Cognitive difficulties or orthostatic intolerance
- Significant functional impairment
Management:
- Education and validation
- Pacing (activity management)
- Sleep hygiene
- Gradual activity increase
- Psychological support
- Avoid complete rest
Avoid boom-bust cycle: Patients often overdo on good days and crash. Teach pacing - consistent activity levels with gradual increase.
Sports Medicine Considerations
Pre-Participation Screening
Key questions:
- History of cardiac symptoms with exercise
- Family history of sudden cardiac death <50 years
- Previous musculoskeletal injuries
- History of concussion
- Menstrual history (females)
Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S)
- Previously "Female Athlete Triad"
- Affects both sexes
- Low energy availability → hormonal disruption → bone stress injuries
Components:
- Low energy availability (inadequate intake for exercise)
- Menstrual dysfunction (females)
- Low bone density
Red flags for RED-S:
- Stress fractures
- Amenorrhoea or irregular periods
- Disordered eating behaviours
- Weight loss
- Bradycardia
Concussion
Recognition (SCAT5):
- Symptoms: Headache, dizziness, confusion, visual disturbance
- Signs: Disorientation, vacant look, balance problems
- Memory: Amnesia for event
Management:
- Remove from play immediately
- Medical assessment
- Physical and cognitive rest (24-48 hours minimum)
- Graduated return to learn, then return to sport
- Medical clearance required before full contact
If in doubt, sit them out: Any suspected concussion requires removal from play. No same-day return to contact sport.
Obesity in Adolescents
Assessment
BMI percentile for age:
- Overweight: 85th-94th percentile
- Obese: ≥95th percentile
Investigations:
- Fasting glucose, HbA1c
- Lipid profile
- LFTs (NAFLD screening)
- Consider: thyroid function, insulin
Comorbidities to Screen
- Type 2 diabetes mellitus
- Dyslipidaemia
- Hypertension
- Obstructive sleep apnoea
- NAFLD
- PCOS (females)
- Depression
Management Approach
- Family involvement essential
- Dietary changes (not restrictive dieting)
- Physical activity (aim for 60 min/day)
- Reduce sedentary behaviour
- Psychological support
- Consider specialist referral for severe obesity
Motivational interviewing: More effective than prescriptive advice. Explore their perspective, set collaborative goals, build self-efficacy.
Sources
- RCH Clinical Practice Guidelines (adolescent health, eating disorders)
- Local adolescent medicine teaching