Literature DB >> 26335084

Influence of schizophrenia diagnosis on providers' practice decisions.

Greer Sullivan1, Dinesh Mittal, Christina M Reaves, Tiffany F Haynes, Xiaotong Han, Snigdha Mukherjee, Scott Morris, Laura Marsh, Patrick W Corrigan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Persons with schizophrenia often receive suboptimal physical health care, but the reasons are poorly understood. Vignettes have been used to examine how a patient's race, gender, or physical health influences a provider's practice; in this study, we used vignettes to examine the effect of a mental health diagnosis (schizophrenia) on providers' clinical expectations and decision making regarding physical health care.
METHOD: A cross-sectional survey was administered from August 2011 to April 2012 to 275 primary care and mental health providers in 5 US Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers. Vignettes described identical scenarios for patients with and without schizophrenia. The survey assessed providers' clinical expectations of patients (adherence, competence, ability to read and understand health education materials) and practice behaviors (referrals to weight reduction, pain management, and sleep study).
RESULTS: Clinicians expected persons with schizophrenia would be less adherent to treatment (P = .04), less able to read and understand educational materials (P = .03), and less capable of managing their health and personal affairs (P < .01). Providers were less likely to refer a patient with schizophrenia to a weight-reduction program (P = .03). Other types of referral decisions (for pain management and sleep study) were not influenced by a schizophrenia diagnosis.
CONCLUSIONS: For both mental health and primary care providers, a history of schizophrenia was found to negatively affect provider expectations of patients' adherence to treatment, ability to understand educational materials, and capacity to manage their treatment and financial affairs as well as some treatment decisions, such as referral to a weight-reduction program. © Copyright 2015 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26335084     DOI: 10.4088/JCP.14m09465

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Psychiatry        ISSN: 0160-6689            Impact factor:   4.384


  6 in total

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2.  Biomarker Case-Detection and Prediction with Potential for Functional Psychosis Screening: Development and Validation of a Model Related to Biochemistry, Sensory Neural Timing and End Organ Performance.

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Authors:  Bich N Dang; Robert A Westbrook; Sarah M Njue; Thomas P Giordano
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5.  Attitudes of mental health clinicians toward perceived inaccuracy of a schizophrenia diagnosis in routine clinical practice.

Authors:  Dana Tzur Bitan; Ariella Grossman Giron; Gady Alon; Shlomo Mendlovic; Yuval Bloch; Aviv Segev
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6.  Stigma towards people with a diagnosis of severe mental disorder in primary healthcare centers: perspectives of service users and health teams in Chile.

Authors:  Pamela Vaccari; Raúl Ramírez-Vielma; Sandra Saldivia; Félix Cova; Alexis Vielma-Aguilera; Víctor Victoriano; Natalia Ulloa-Vidal; Pamela Grandón
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  6 in total

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