Literature DB >> 29331602

A cross-continental analysis of weight gain, psychiatric diagnoses and medication use during inpatient psychiatric treatment. The international study on physical illness in mentally ill.

Christina Engelke1, Christian Lange-Asschenfeldt2, Stephanie Peter3, Kai G Kahl4, Karel Frasch5, Jens I Larsen6, Graziella G Bickel7, Bernhard Bork8, Bent A Jacobsen9, Signe O Wallenstein-Jensen10, Christoph Lauber11, Birthe Mogensen12, Jørgen A Nielsen13, Wulf Rössler14, Kenji J Tsuchiya15, Kristian L Toftegaard16, Ulla A Andersen17, Richard Uwakwe18, Povl Munk-Jørgensen19, Joachim Cordes20.   

Abstract

Weight gain among psychiatric inpatients is a widespread phenomenon. This change in body mass index (BMI) can be caused by several factors. Based on recent research, we assume the following factors are related to weight gain during psychiatric inpatient treatment: psychiatric medication, psychiatric diagnosis, sex, age, weight on admission and geographic region of treatment. 876 of originally recruited 2328 patients met the criteria for our analysis. Patients were recruited and examined in mental health care centres in Nigeria (N = 265), Japan (N = 145) and Western-Europe (Denmark, Germany and Switzerland; N = 466). There was a significant effect of psychiatric medication, psychiatric diagnoses and geographic region, but not age and sex, on BMI changes. Geographic region had a significant effect on BMI change, with Nigerian patients gaining significantly more weight than Japanese and Western European patients. Moreover, geographic region influenced the type of psychiatric medication prescribed and the psychiatric diagnoses. The diagnoses and psychiatric medication prescribed had a significant effect on BMI change. In conclusion, we consider weight gain as a multifactorial phenomenon that is influenced by several factors. One can discuss a number of explanations for our findings, such as different clinical practices in the geographical regions (prescribing or admission strategies and access-to-care aspects), as well as socio-economic and cultural differences.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Diagnosis; Psychopharmacology; Public mental health; Social and cross-cultural psychiatry; Weight gain

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29331602     DOI: 10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.11.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Psychiatry        ISSN: 0924-9338            Impact factor:   5.361


  1 in total

1.  High Rates of Genetic Diagnosis in Psychiatric Patients with and without Neurodevelopmental Disorders: Toward Improved Genetic Diagnosis in Psychiatric Populations.

Authors:  Joyce So; Venuja Sriretnakumar; Jessica Suddaby; Brianna Barsanti-Innes; Hanna Faghfoury; Timothy Gofine
Journal:  Can J Psychiatry       Date:  2020-06-04       Impact factor: 4.356

  1 in total

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