| Literature DB >> 32349698 |
Pamela Jacobsen1,2, Emmanuelle Peters3,4, Emily J Robinson5,6, Paul Chadwick3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inpatient psychiatric care is a scarce and expensive resource in the National Health Service (NHS), with chronic bed shortages being partly driven by high re-admission rates. Brief inpatient talking therapies for psychosis could help reduce re-admission rates. The primary aim was to assess feasibility and acceptability of a novel, brief, mindfulness-based intervention for inpatients with psychosis. The secondary aim was to collect pilot outcome data on readmission rate, at 6 and 12 months (m) post discharge, and self-report symptom measures at 6 m.Entities:
Keywords: Crisis intervention; Mindfulness; Psychiatric hospital readmission; Psychiatric units; Psychosis; Psychotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32349698 PMCID: PMC7191699 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02608-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flow through trial (CONSORT diagram)
Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of participants
| SAT ( | MBCI ( | OVERALL ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | |||
| - Mean (range) | 33 years (19–65) | 35 years (18–52) | 34 years (18–65) |
| Gender | |||
| - Male | 17 (71%) | 17 (65%) | 34 (68%) |
| - Female | 7 (29%) | 9 (35%) | 16 (32%) |
| Ethnicity | |||
| - White | 8 (33%) | 8 (30%) | 16 (32%) |
| - Asian | 3 (13%) | 3 (12%) | 6 (12%) |
| - Black | 9 (37%) | 12 (46%) | 21 (42%) |
| - Mixed Race | 3 (13%) | 3 (12%) | 6 (12%) |
| - Other | 1 (4%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (2%) |
| Diagnosis | |||
| - F20–29 (Schizophrenia-spectrum) | 17 (71%) | 20 (77%) | 37 (74%) |
| - F30–39 (Mood disorder) | 7 (29%) | 6 (23%) | 13 (26%) |
| Psychotic symptoms (self-report) | |||
| - Delusions only | 12 (50%) | 14 (54%) | 26 (52%) |
| - Voices only | 1 (4%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (2%) |
| - Delusions + voices | 11 (46%) | 12 (46%) | 23 (46%) |
| Legal status on admission | |||
| - Informal | 6 (25%) | 8 (31%) | 14 (28%) |
| - MHAa Sec 2 | 13 (54%) | 14 (54%) | 27 (54%) |
| - MHA Sec 3 | 5 (21%) | 3 (11%) | 8 (16%) |
| - MHA Sec 37 | 0 (0%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (2%) |
| Open to secondary care psychiatric services on admission | |||
| - Yes | 12 (50%) | 10 (38%) | 22 (44%) |
| - No | 12 (50%) | 16 (62%) | 28 (56%) |
| Years known to services | |||
| - < 1 year | 5 (21%) | 4 (15%) | 9 (18%) |
| - 1–5 years | 4 (17%) | 6 (23%) | 10 (20%) |
| - 6–10 years | 6 (25%) | 8 (31%) | 14 (28%) |
| - 11–15 years | 2 (8%) | 2 (8%) | 4 (8%) |
| - > 15 years | 7 (29%) | 6 (23%) | 13 (26%) |
| Psychiatric medication at baseline | |||
| - Prescribed at least one medication | 23 (96%) | 26 (100%) | 49 (98%) |
| - Prescribed an anti-psychotic | 21 (88%) | 25 (96%) | 46 (92%) |
| - Prescribed an anti-depressant | 4 (21%) | 5 (19%) | 9 (18%) |
| - Prescribed a mood-stabilizer | 4 (21%) | 1 (4%) | 5 (10%) |
| Anti-psychotic medication dose at baseline | |||
| - Mean % of BNF maximum dose | 51.2% | 49.6% | 50.3% |
| - 95% CI | [37.7, 64.6] | [39.5, 59.7] | [42.4–58.2] |
| - Range | 16.5–137.5 | 7.5–100 | 7.5–137.5 |
| Previous admissions | |||
| - Yes | 14 (58%) (mean = 5.64, range 1–14) | 21 (81%) (mean = 4.00, range 1–10) | 35 (70%) (mean = 4.66, range 1–14) |
| - No | 10 (42%) | 5 (19%) | 15 (30%) |
| Admission in previous 12 months | |||
| - Yes | 7 (29%) | 8 (31%) | 15 (30%) |
| - No | 17 (71%) | 18 (69%) | 35 (70%) |
| Psychological therapy in past 5 years | |||
| - None | 11 (46%) | 12 (46%) | 23 (46%) |
| - Offered | 3 (12%) | 4 (15%) | 7 (14%) |
| - Received | 10 (42%) | 10 (39%) | 20 (40%) |
aMHA Mental Health Act, Sec 2 Section 2 (assessment), Sec 3 Section 3(treatment), Sec 37 Section 37 (hospital order)
Service use outcomes at 6-month follow-up by treatment condition
| Outcome | 6-month follow-up | 12-month follow-up | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MBCI ( | SAT ( | MBCI ( | SAT ( | |
| - Yes | 6 (24%) | 5 (21%) | 7 (29%) | 11 (46%) |
| - No | 19 (76%) | 19 (79%) | 17 (71%) | 13 (54%) |
| - Mean (SE) | 156 (8.9) | 164 (8.0) | 291 (23.8) | 278 (23.1) |
| - Range | 41–180 | 58–180 | 41–360 | 58–360 |
| - 95% CI | 139–174 | 148–179 | 244–337 | 233–323 |
| - Mean (SD) | 11 (26) | 14 (36) | 28 (66) | 33 (63) |
| - Range | 0–83 | 0–117 | 0–244 | 0–212 |
| - 95% CI | 0–22 | 0–28 | 0–56 | 7–60 |
| - Yes | 0 (0%) | 2 (8%) | 2 (8%) | 4 (17%) |
| - No | 25 (100%) | 22 (92%) | 22 (92%) | 20 (83%) |
| - Mean (SD) | 14 (7) | 13 (7) | ||
| - Range | 0–32 | 3–34 | ||
| - 95% CI | 10–17 | 10–16 | ||
| - Yes | 21(88%) | |||
| - No | 3 (12%) | |||
| Exacerbation in psychotic symptoms + change in clinical management | ||||
| - Yes | 6 (25%) | 7 (29%) | 9 (38%) | 14 (58%) |
| - No | 18 (75%) | 17 (71%) | 15 (62%) | 10 (42%) |
aRe-admission data not available for 1 participant
bRe-admission data not available for 2 participants
cOBD Occupied bed day
dStand-alone episodes of care only (i.e. not overlapping with inpatient admissions)
eCMHT Community mental health team; no. of contacts excluding therapy appointments
Fig. 2Survival curve of time to 1st admission during 12 month follow-up window: Kaplan-Meier Plot