| Literature DB >> 34348680 |
L M Grünwald1,2, C Duddy3, R Byng4, N Crellin5, J Moncrieff6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increasing number of service users diagnosed with schizophrenia and psychosis are being discharged from specialist secondary care services to primary care, many of whom are prescribed long-term antipsychotics. It is unclear if General Practitioners (GPs) have the confidence and experience to appropriately review and adjust doses of antipsychotic medication without secondary care support. AIM: To explore barriers and facilitators of conducting antipsychotic medication reviews in primary care for individuals with no specialist mental health input. DESIGN &Entities:
Keywords: Antipsychotic medication; General practice; Medication review; Primary care; Psychosis; Schizophrenia; Severe mental illness (SMI); Shared decision making (SDM); Stigma; Trust
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34348680 PMCID: PMC8340528 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-021-03355-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Glossary
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Attribution Theory | a theory which supposes that people attempt to understand the behaviour of others by attributing feelings, beliefs, and intentions to them [ |
| Context (C) | Elements outside the parameters of the formal programme architecture, that have causal impact, e.g. norms and values, economic conditions, participant characteristics |
| Context Mechanism Outcome Configuration (CMOC) | Configuration of the contexts, which trigger a mechanism, which results in an outcome. |
| Diagnostic Overshadowing | Misattribution of person’s symptoms as part of their mental health diagnosis rather than a co-morbid physical health issue. This can lead to incorrect diagnosis and/or delayed treatment. |
| Mechanism (M) | M is the underpinning generative force that leads to outcomes, triggerered by Context |
| Medication Review | In this review, a discussion between GP and SU to discuss the appropriateness and acceptability of their antipsychotic medication, including side effects, efficacy with regards to mental health and physical health. |
| Outcome (O) | Any result of a programme or study, can be intended or unintended, expected or unexpected |
| Programme Theory (PT) | A hypothesised theory made up of CMOCs, developed throughout the review (initial programme theory to refined programme theory) |
| Realist And MEta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards (RAMESES) | Quality and publication standards and training materials for realist research approaches, funded by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research Programmes. |
| Substantive Theory | A higher-level conceptual theory that is not directly about the programme, but introduces a concept(s) that increases the explanatory power of the programme theory |
Fig. 1Data sourcing and PT development- Flow Chart
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Adults (age 18 and above) | Service users currently under section (Mental Health Act, Forensic, Community Treatment Order) or currently in crisis or studies discussing Crisis services (Home Treatment Team etc) |
| Diagnosis of Psychosis, schizophrenia, psychosis like symptoms (SMI) | Animal studies |
| Medication reviews, care and treatment of service users diagnosed with SMI | Physical health reviews only, which do not include factors around treating SU or have medication reviews alongside |
| Published after 1954 (year the first antipsychotic was introduced) | Studies discussing prescription of non-antipsychotic medications |
| Published in English language | Studies from low- and middle-income countries |
| All study methodologies | Studies discussing the prevalence, and treatment of side effects by adding other (non-antipsychotic) medications |
| Prescription of antipsychotic medication in primary care | Studies discussing the prevalence or validity of a diagnosis of severe mental illness |
| Off – label prescribing | |
| Excluded later: | |
| • Studies investigating bipolar disorder | |
| • Clozapine |
Fig. 2Literature Search
Search results
| Source identification | 30 articles main search, 20 citation search, 5 iterative searches |
|---|---|
| 34 empirical studies (largely questionnaires and qualitative interviews), 1 systematic review, 16 non-systematic literature reviews, 4 other | |
| 27 care and treatment of people diagnosed with SMI (of which 10 guidance for GPs, 7 GP surveys on treatment of people diagnosed with SMI), 21 experience of taking antipsychotics from SU perspective, 7 stigma and Shared Decision Making | |
| 31 = UK, 10 = USA, 7 = Australia, 3 = Canada, 1 = Ireland, 1 = Italy, 1 = Israel, 1 = Switzerland, 1 = Austria | |
| 23 = primary care, 5 = secondary care, 26 = about care or treatment in general, without specifically looking at service provision in secondary or primary care services, 2 = n/a - setting unrelated to mental health |
CMOC Title and Sources
| CMOC Title | Source Data used |
|---|---|
| 1. Low expectations regarding recovery from mental illness | [ |
| 2. Perceived lack of SUs’ capabilities to participate in medication reviews | [ |
| 3. Lack of information sharing between GPs and SU | [ |
| 4. Perceived risk of SUs | [ |
| 5. Mutual uncertainty regarding medication and illness trajectory | [ |
Barriers and facilitators to antipsychotic medication reviews
| Barriers | Group | CMOC | Key quote | Facilitator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP | Where GPs have low expectations regarding recovery for SU diagnosed with SMI(C), and rely on antipsychotics as a main treatment (C), then they may be left feeling hopeless (M), leading to little or no ongoing antipsychotic medication reviews (O). | “the most significant obstacles to the effective management of the chronically mentally ill are the prevailing negative attitudes and believes about them” [ | Realistic expectations of what the medication can achieve [ | |
| Service users (SU) | Where GPs communicate hopelessness to SU (C), they may in turn feel hopeless (M), and therefore unlikely to commence a conversation about medication(O). | “When I approached my GP, he [..] said, ‘Well, you’ll be on these tablets for the rest of your life,[…] being told I’d never be able to work again, I’d never have an education, never have relationships, never have anything in my life. So, for a period of time I thought well, there’s no hope” [ | Recovery orientated treatment [ | |
| GP | Where GPs perceive SUs to lack capabilities and/ or “insight” (C), despite years of stability (C), GPs may act in a paternalistic/authoritarian way (M) and dismiss medication queries (O) and a conversation regarding medication(O). Additional Context: 1) Where antipsychotic side effects are apparent in SU (apathy, cognitive impairment) 2) Where GPs feel pressure to prescribe 3) Diagnostic overshadowing (see Glossary) | GPs scepticism towards reliability and insight of people with psychosis may discourage clients themselves from help-seeking, with further negative effects on their health” [ “I’ve had difficulty in getting full regular medical check-ups as every symptom is considered a sign for stress” [ | See SU as capable; enable SU to discuss medication/ side effects; notion that medication queries are justified [ Commitment to Shared Decision Making (O) | |
| SU | In turn, experiencing a dismissal of their queries (C), particularly if SUs have a history of being coerced to take medication or being committed to treatment against their will (sectioning) (C), this will lead to decreased trust (M) in GPs, leading SU to not discuss medication with their GP (O) and covert medication changes (O). | I think it’s just a general disregard for they have for anything that people say, because they’re mentally ill therefore you know, anything they say is questionable [..] and they say, well, I have a problem with chlorpromazine or something, they might override that, rather than listen to what the consumer is saying” [ | Feel listened to, taken seriously, time to talk [ | |
| SU | Information about medication: Due to a lack of information (C), SU may be unaware (M) of the risk associated with antipsychotics and the need for check-ups, leading to no conversation (O) and lack of attendance at reviews (O). | 55% [of patients] said that they were unaware of the potential metabolic side-effects of atypical antipsychotic medications [..]61% said that they had had no monitoring blood tests in the past year. 69% did not know that certain monitoring blood tests were recommended [ | Provide more information [ | |
| GP | Information about side effects: Where GPs are aware of side effects (C),they may fear (M) that SU will discontinue their medication (O) and feel it is in the SUs interest (M) to not share more information regarding side effects (O). | “At one time … it was … if you tell patients about side effects, they won’t take the medication.” [ | Increased information sharing can lead to higher adherence and facilitates trust [ | |
| SU | Due to lack of discussion about side effects (C), SU may in turn feel shocked (M) and loss of trust (M), where they experience side effects (C) which may lead them to alter or discontinue medication without further consultation (O). Distrust (M) is potentially amplified when SU access information elsewhere (C), like the internet, and realise that those are potentially common side effects. | “Lack of communication about antipsychotics was the contributing factor to my stopping attempt. I recall vividly when I was sitting on the couch, watching TV, and I looked down and I noticed my chest was wet, upon further inspection I realized that I was lactating. I was shocked, scared, and terrified. It was at that moment that I decided to quit.” [ | Access to sufficient information could help to increase SU confidence to commence conversations about medication [ | |
| GP | Despite evidence to the contrary, GPs may consider SUs to be a risk to others (C), which can lead to fear in GPs (M), which may then lead to avoidance of medication reviews (O), or GPs taking a passive role (O). | A survey of GP attitudes to people diagnosed with schizophrenia found that they endorsed either “partially true” or “completely true” for: “people are frightened by them (93.9%) and ‘they would become dangerous if they stopped their medication’ (73.9%) [ A survey of provider ratings of metabolic care barriers found that the most endorsed item in the category “primary care provider barriers” is “providers are scared of people with SMI” [ | Research needed to explore how to increase GPs feeling safe in appointments. | |
| SU | Where SUs have current/previous experience of being perceived as frightening (C), a good GP-SU relationship or open conversation is unlikely to occur (O). We were unable to elicit a mechanism here. Mechanisms were not identified in the literature, it is possible that a loss of trust or feeling disillusioned could play a role, however further research is required. | SU “felt their GP was scared of them, ending a consultation quickly and suggesting they find a different GP” [ | Feel comfortable at their GP practice, reassurance regarding risk of being sectioned. | |
| GP | Where there is a lack of guidance and (perceived) secondary care support (C), GPs may worry (M) about relapses and lack confidence (M) in changing medication and then they may be reluctant to change medication (O) even where SU are stable in mental health (C). | Many GPs are reluctant to reduce these without supervision, especially when the patient appears well. […] There is no clear agreement on the optimum frequency for reviewing maintenance treatment, nor is there consensus on what symptom-free period warrants consideration of discontinuation [ | Guidance on how to review and reduce (if indicated), secondary care support [ | |
| SU | SU may feel equally concerned (M) to start a conversation about medication (O), due to fears of relapse (M), especially for those who have a history of sectioning (C). SU may not even be aware that medication changes are possible (C) | “This dynamic [power imbalance] resulted in some participants feeling coerced into taking medication and out of control. [..]When the option to discontinue neuroleptic medication was not explicit, participants were left with uncertainty regarding the level of support they could expect from clinicians. […] All participants acknowledged the risks of withdrawing neuroleptic medication [ | Continuity of care; building of trusting relationship to enable discussion of medication changes and to identify and manage potential relapse [ |
Fig. 3Recommendations