| Literature DB >> 35291964 |
Nadia E Crellin1,2, Stefan Priebe3, Nicola Morant4, Glyn Lewis4, Nick Freemantle5, Sonia Johnson4, Rob Horne6, Vanessa Pinfold7, Lyn Kent8, Ruth Smith8, Katherine Darton8, Ruth E Cooper3,9,10, Maria Long11,4, Jemima Thompson12, Lisa Gruenwald11,4, Robert Freudenthal13, Jacki L Stansfeld11,4, Joanna Moncrieff11,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Antipsychotic medication can reduce psychotic symptoms and risk of relapse in people with schizophrenia and related disorders, but it is not always effective and adverse effects can be significant. We know little of patients' views about continuing or discontinuing antipsychotic treatment. AIMS: To explore the views of people with schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders about continuing their antipsychotic medication or attempting to reduce or discontinue this medication with clinical support.Entities:
Keywords: Antipsychotics; Mixed methods; Psychosis; Schizophrenia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35291964 PMCID: PMC8925064 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-022-03822-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Participant characteristics
| Characteristics | Total |
|---|---|
| Male | 175 (65%) |
| Female | 94 (35%) |
| 46.2 (11.50) 21–76 | |
| Schizophrenia | 188 (70.4%) |
| Schizoaffective Disorder | 47 (17.6%) |
| Delusional Disorder | 6 (2.2%) |
| Drug-induced psychosis | 1 (0.4%) |
| Psychosis/psychotic episodes | 17 (6.4%) |
| Bipolar disorder | 5 (1.9%) |
| Other | 3 (1.1%) |
| < 1 year | 2 (0.7%) |
| 1–3 years | 14 (5.2%) |
| 4–10 years | 67 (25.1%) |
| 11–15 years | 45 (16.9%) |
| 16–20 years | 44 (16.5%) |
| > 20 years | 95 (35.6%) |
| First generation only | 82 (30.9%) |
| Second generation only (excluding clozapine) | 128 (48.3%) |
| Clozapine only | 34 (12.8%) |
| First and second generation (excluding clozapine) | 14 (5.3%) |
| Clozapine plus other antipsychotic | 7 (2.6%) |
| Primary Care | 41 (15%) |
| Secondary Care | 228 (85%) |
| 16.5 (10.3) 1–49 | |
353.1 mg (269.4) 25–1333 mg | |
| 1 antipsychotic | 222 (84.1%) |
| 2 or more antipsychotics | 42 (15.9%) |
| Oral only | 131 (49.6%) |
| Depot only | 111 (42.0%) |
| Both oral and depot | 22 (8.3%) |
| 2.6 (5.1) -8 – 10 | |
| Single | 176 (66.7%) |
| Married/civil partnership/In a long-term relationship | 53 (20.1%) |
| Separated / Divorced / Widow/widower | 30 (11.4%) |
| Other | 5 (1.9%) |
| White British/Irish/Other white background | 137 (51.5%) |
| Black or black British | 69 (25.9%) |
| Mixed | 15 (5.6%) |
| Asian or Asian British | 36 (13.5%) |
| Other | 9 (3.4%) |
| Employed | 27 (10.2%) |
| Unemployed | 187 (70.3%) |
| Student | 12 (4.5%) |
| Retired | 24 (9.0%) |
| Voluntary work | 16 (6.0%) |
| Living alone | 174 (66.4%) |
| Living with husband/wife/partner | 39 (14.9%) |
| Living with parents | 20 (7.6%) |
| Living with other relatives/friends/supported living | 29 (11.1%) |
adiagnoses are listed according to those given by participants, which may not have agreed with diagnoses established during screening. Therefore some people are included who described their condition as ‘bipolar disorder’ even though this was not an inclusion diagnosis
Potential predictors of wanting to discontinue antipsychotic medication
| Potential predictor variable | % or Mean value (SD) in people who want to stop antipsychotics | % or Mean value (SD) in people who do not want to stop antipsychotics | Mean difference/Odds ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 68.6% male ( | 61.0% male ( | 1.40 (.839–2.33) | .197 |
| Age | 45.90 (11.32) ( | 46.57 (12.02) ( | −0.67 (−3.54–2.20) | .646 |
| Marital status | 73.2% single/unmarried | 63.7% single / unmarried | 1.55 (.87–2.76) | .173 |
| Ethnicity | 50% white British or other | 52.2% white British or other | 0.92 (.55–1.54) | .846 |
| Employment | 85.3% unemployed | 83.2% unemployed | 0.85 (.40–1.82) | .824 |
| Time taking antipsychotics | 14.68 (9.57) ( | 17.32 (10.57) ( | −2.64 (−5.67 to .391) | .087 |
| Antipsychotic preparation | 44.4% oral only | 51.4% oral only | 0.76 (.45–1.28) | .366 |
| Dose of antipsychotics (in chlorpromazine equivalents) | 328.91 (275.46) ( | 365.01 (268.04) ( | −36.10 (−115.48 to 43.27) | .371 |
| DAI totala | −.86 (5.16) ( | 4.32 (4.11) ( | −5.18 (−6.53 to −3.83) |
*p values are derived from t-tests for continuous variables and Chi squared tests for categorical variables; bold indicates significance at the P < .05 level
aDrug Attitude Inventory
Content analysis of participant views about taking antipsychotics on a long-term basis, and attitudes towards reducing or stopping
| Category | N (%)a | Example or quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Wanting to avoid relapse | 93 (70%) | “I relapse much less when I’m on it, so in that sense I’m happy to take it” |
| General feelings of stability or improvement | 48 (36%) | “Helps me stay on an even keel” |
| Doctor tells me to take them | 32 (24%) | “I have to take it because I’m told by my doctors, I have to listen to them, I know that” |
| Positive symptom reduction | 20 (15%) | “The voices are much worse when I don’t take the medication” |
| Sedative and calming effects | 21 (16%) | “Medication keeps me calm and out of trouble” |
| Indifference, passivity, uncertainty, ambivalence | 18 (14%) | “I know that I have to take it, it kind of, doesn’t mean nothing no more, y’know … I just take it” |
| Other symptom reduction (including depression, agitation, suicidal ideation) | 16 (12%) | “My antipsychotic medication is the reason why I’m alive, because I’ve had suicidal thoughts before” |
| Improved functioning | 11 (8%) | “I’m just pleased to be able to function, do normal things” |
| Other reasons | 13 (10%) | E.g. to please family members, habit, to receive welfare benefits, to “not feel different” |
| Unspecified adverse effects | 40 (33%) | “Side effects are the main problem … the more you take them, the more you get the side effects” |
| Sedative effects | 36 (30%) | “I feel so relentlessly tired and can’t get out of bed like everyone else” |
| Weight gain | 33 (27%) | “Olanzapine made me put on a huge amount of weight, 3 stones in 3 months without really changing anything” |
| Neurological effects | 31 (26%) | “Makes me weaker, takes my power away. Can’t do as much as I used to, in the gym and things” |
| Concern about long term health effects | 25 (21%) | “I am scared of the unseen damage that it may do to my makings … my chemistry … my makings” |
| Impact on functioning | 20 (17%) | “I seem to function better when I’m not on tablets.. if I wasn’t on the tablets I’d hear more voices, but I had a job, I’d cook, clean, have my own place, when I’m on the tablets I don’t seem to be doing anything” |
| Dislike the idea of taking long term medication | 20 (17%) | “The idea of having to take drugs just to not go crazy doesn’t sit well with me, it makes me feel like I’m not capable of handling life” |
| Cognitive and emotional side effects | 15 (12%) | “Lose your feelings, like you’re a dead person. Want to feel life a bit more” |
| Doubtful of need for medication | 13 (11%) | “I really want to come off it now, because I feel that I am well” |
| Sexual dysfunction | 6 (5%) | “I don’t have interest in sex” |
| Other adverse effects | 5 (4%) | “Sometimes I don’t like it, sometimes it makes me feel a bit bloated and sometimes I get a funny taste in my mouth” |
| Other reasons | 14 (12%) | E.g. Dislike of injections, embarrassment, fear of addiction, inconvenience, doesn’t resolve symptoms, wanting a ‘holistic approach’ |
| Support from psychiatrists, other healthcare professionals and services | 29 (48%) | “I believe that true collaborative work with the medication staff and myself about reducing my antipsychotic medication is the best way for me to go” |
| Gradual reduction | 15 (25%) | “Not too quick, I don’t think you should drop it too quick. Maybe slowly do it” |
| Wanting to be independent | 10 (16%) | “If I did that [discontinued medication] I’d be on the road to much more independence” |
| Stable circumstances and healthy lifestyle (e.g. employment, career, diet) | 9 (15%) | “I’d need a healthy lifestyle [to reduce]” |
| Other | 10 (16%) | E.g. as required medication, family support, alternative therapies (‘natural remedies’), therapy or counselling. |
aResponses categories are not mutually exclusive so %‘s do not add up to 100