RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Due to an experienced gap in care for adolescents with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and an intellectual disability (ID), an interdisciplinary outpatient clinic was initiated by child- and adolescent psychiatry services together with intellectual disability physicians in the Rotterdam region in 2017. AIM: Evaluation of the ASD-ID outpatient clinic. METHOD: A retrospective chart review study of the first year of the ASD-ID outpatient clinic was performed. The care specific traits of the adolescents who visited the ASD-ID outpatient clinic, their health care costs and the effect of the ASD-ID outpatient clinic on both the health care costs and the patient outflow was compared to the traits of the adolescents of the autism outpatient clinic. RESULTS: 32 adolescents who were referred to the ASD-ID outpatient clinic were comparable to 204 adolescents of the autism outpatient clinic in age (mean 16.5 years) and gender (75% male). They had 39% more DSM-IV classifications, were in care 3.7 years longer and had 44% more health care costs. After visiting the ASD-ID outpatient clinic, 50% of the adolescents were transferred within a year and 100% within three years to a intellectual disability physician. CONCLUSION: Adolescents with ASD and ID are a group with a substantial demand for care who deserve specific attention. An integrated ASD-ID outpatient clinic contributes to this demand.