| Literature DB >> 30583547 |
Jennifer Bingham1, David R Axon2, Nicole Scovis3, Ann M Taylor4.
Abstract
One fifth of U.S. adults have a current mental illness. Nutrition, physical activity, and sleep are critical to physical health; any related deficiencies may worsen existing mental health conditions. Little is known about the impact of clinical pharmacist assessment and consultation in improving physical and mental health outcomes. The study objective was to determine whether patients' mental health status improved following clinical pharmacist consultation. This pilot study involved clinical pharmacist-delivered services at an integrated medical behavioral health clinic in June 2018. Inclusion criteria required adults aged 18 years older, an established mental health diagnosis, and taking ≥2 prescribed psychotropic medications. One pharmacist conducted telephonic, medical, and psychiatric health risk assessment and counseling to improve nutrition, physical activity, and sleep status, both initially and at two-week follow-up. The Duke Health Profile (Duke) physical, anxiety, depression, and anxiety-depression scores measured patients' pre/post changes. Participants (n = 20) experienced higher Duke physical scores (p = 0.007) and significantly lower anxiety (p = 0.025), depression (p = 0.001) and anxiety-depression scores (p = 0.005) at follow-up. This pilot study provides preliminary evidence for pharmacist-led, targeted, telephonic counseling in improving short-term physical and mental Duke health scores. Further research evaluating the impact of clinical pharmacists' role in improving physical and behavioral health outcomes is warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Duke; education; exercise; nutrition; pharmacist; sleep
Year: 2018 PMID: 30583547 PMCID: PMC6473796 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy7010002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Figure 1Flowchart showing the number of individuals in the study.
Demographic characteristics of participants (N = 20) participating in a pharmacist-delivered program for Medicaid patients with mental illness.
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| 20–30 | 4 (20) |
| 31–40 | 8 (40) |
| 41–50 | 6 (30) |
| ≥51 | 2 (10) |
|
| |
| Female | 12 (60) |
| Male | 8 (40) |
|
| |
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 12 (60) |
|
| |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 0 (0) |
| White | 12 (60) |
| Asian | 0 (0) |
| Black or African American | 1 (5) |
| Unknown | 7 (35) |
Differences between Duke Health Profile Scores of participants at baseline and follow-up (n = 20).
| Profile Scale Scores | Baseline Mean (SD) | Follow up Mean (SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 54.5 (21.9) | 74.5 (17.9) | 0.007 |
|
| |||
| Anxiety | 49.6 (26.1) | 35.8 (17.7) | 0.025 |
| Depression | 53.5 (31.2) | 31.0 (18.3) | 0.001 |
| Anxiety-depression scale | 49.3 (31.8) | 29.3 (18.4) | 0.005 |
|
| 50.8 (29.7) | 32.0 (18.1) | 0.010 |
Key: SD: standard deviation. The level of significance was set at <0.05.