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Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team

AIMS: To monitor the quality of physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in the North West Edinburgh Community Mental Health Team (CMHT). We also evaluated the completeness of prescriptions and Mental Health Act (Scotland) (Act) 2003 paperwork where relevant....

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Autores principales: Murdie, Douglas, Wojtowicz, Jakub, Thompson, Alexandra, MacLeod, Anne, Mallis, Adam, Evans, Hamsi, Haggart, Joshua, Choi, Hae, Argent, Vikki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8772292/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.882
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author Murdie, Douglas
Wojtowicz, Jakub
Thompson, Alexandra
MacLeod, Anne
Mallis, Adam
Evans, Hamsi
Haggart, Joshua
Choi, Hae
Argent, Vikki
author_facet Murdie, Douglas
Wojtowicz, Jakub
Thompson, Alexandra
MacLeod, Anne
Mallis, Adam
Evans, Hamsi
Haggart, Joshua
Choi, Hae
Argent, Vikki
author_sort Murdie, Douglas
collection PubMed
description AIMS: To monitor the quality of physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in the North West Edinburgh Community Mental Health Team (CMHT). We also evaluated the completeness of prescriptions and Mental Health Act (Scotland) (Act) 2003 paperwork where relevant. BACKGROUND: Antipsychotic medications are medicines for treating conditions such as Schizophrenia, but some may be associated with an increased risk of Metabolic Syndrome. Moreover, evidence indicates that patients with major mental disorder have a reduced life expectancy in comparison to those without such diagnoses. These two factors illustrate the importance of the physical health of this patient cohort being monitored on a regular basis. This project will evaluate how a local CMHT is performing, with the possibility of enacting service improvements if required. METHOD: The records of the 60 patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication administered by this CMHT were reviewed. A check-list was created consisting of 14 categories analysing the quality of physical health monitoring, as well as compliance with prescription standards and, where relevant, Mental Health Act (Scotland) (Act) 2003 paperwork. We compared patient records against our checklist for the calendar year of 2019. The Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) 131 (Management of Schizophrenia) section 5.2 was used as the gold standard for physical health monitoring against which the data we collected was compared. RESULT: We identified a wide range of flaws with the current system and implementation of monitoring, and difficulty in locating the required information. There was no consistent monitoring of physical observations on electronic record, nor an accepted alternative way in which this was documented. Furthermore, blood tests were not consistently obtained either by the service or GP practices in a reproducible manner. This led to discussions within the CMHT regarding creation of a new pathway for the monitoring of this patient cohort using a Quality Improvement model, with the ultimate goal to establish a regular physical health clinic. CONCLUSION: There is significant evidence that patients with major mental disorder do not access healthcare as consistently as those without, leading to a disparity in life expectancy. In light of the fact that antipsychotic medications can be associated with Metabolic Syndrome, we have an even greater responsibility to tackle this marked health inequality by appropriately monitoring our patients. This was not done well in this particular CMHT, but this project will lead to improvements in the service and ultimately patient care.
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spelling pubmed-87722922022-01-31 Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team Murdie, Douglas Wojtowicz, Jakub Thompson, Alexandra MacLeod, Anne Mallis, Adam Evans, Hamsi Haggart, Joshua Choi, Hae Argent, Vikki BJPsych Open Service Evaluation AIMS: To monitor the quality of physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in the North West Edinburgh Community Mental Health Team (CMHT). We also evaluated the completeness of prescriptions and Mental Health Act (Scotland) (Act) 2003 paperwork where relevant. BACKGROUND: Antipsychotic medications are medicines for treating conditions such as Schizophrenia, but some may be associated with an increased risk of Metabolic Syndrome. Moreover, evidence indicates that patients with major mental disorder have a reduced life expectancy in comparison to those without such diagnoses. These two factors illustrate the importance of the physical health of this patient cohort being monitored on a regular basis. This project will evaluate how a local CMHT is performing, with the possibility of enacting service improvements if required. METHOD: The records of the 60 patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication administered by this CMHT were reviewed. A check-list was created consisting of 14 categories analysing the quality of physical health monitoring, as well as compliance with prescription standards and, where relevant, Mental Health Act (Scotland) (Act) 2003 paperwork. We compared patient records against our checklist for the calendar year of 2019. The Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) 131 (Management of Schizophrenia) section 5.2 was used as the gold standard for physical health monitoring against which the data we collected was compared. RESULT: We identified a wide range of flaws with the current system and implementation of monitoring, and difficulty in locating the required information. There was no consistent monitoring of physical observations on electronic record, nor an accepted alternative way in which this was documented. Furthermore, blood tests were not consistently obtained either by the service or GP practices in a reproducible manner. This led to discussions within the CMHT regarding creation of a new pathway for the monitoring of this patient cohort using a Quality Improvement model, with the ultimate goal to establish a regular physical health clinic. CONCLUSION: There is significant evidence that patients with major mental disorder do not access healthcare as consistently as those without, leading to a disparity in life expectancy. In light of the fact that antipsychotic medications can be associated with Metabolic Syndrome, we have an even greater responsibility to tackle this marked health inequality by appropriately monitoring our patients. This was not done well in this particular CMHT, but this project will lead to improvements in the service and ultimately patient care. Cambridge University Press 2021-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8772292/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.882 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Service Evaluation
Murdie, Douglas
Wojtowicz, Jakub
Thompson, Alexandra
MacLeod, Anne
Mallis, Adam
Evans, Hamsi
Haggart, Joshua
Choi, Hae
Argent, Vikki
Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title_full Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title_fullStr Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title_full_unstemmed Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title_short Physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west Edinburgh community mental health team
title_sort physical health monitoring of patients prescribed depot antipsychotic medication in north west edinburgh community mental health team
topic Service Evaluation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8772292/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.882
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