Psychiatrist and Psychiatric Pharmacists Beliefs and Preferences for Atypical Antipsychotic Treatments in Patients With Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders.
Autor: | Touchette, Daniel R., Gor, Deval, Sharma, Dolly, Chennault, Rachel R., Ng-Mak, Daisy S., Rajagopalan, Krithika, Ellingrod, Vicki |
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Předmět: |
DRUG therapy for schizophrenia
ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents DRUGS DRUG efficacy HEALTH facility administration HOSPITAL care HEALTH insurance BIPOLAR disorder PATIENT compliance PATIENT safety PHARMACISTS DECISION making in clinical medicine COMORBIDITY CROSS-sectional method PHYSICIANS' attitudes ATTITUDES of medical personnel DESCRIPTIVE statistics |
Zdroj: | Journal of Pharmacy Practice; Feb2021, Vol. 34 Issue 1, p78-88, 11p |
Abstrakt: | Background: Selection of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder treatments is complicated by treatment-effect heterogeneity. Objectives: This study assessed how clinicians' beliefs and health system/ insurace policies impact choice of atypical antipsychotic agent in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted of members of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy and College of Psychiatric & Neurologic Pharmacists. Beliefs regarding atypical antipsychotic effectiveness and safety, impact of comorbidity on drug selection, and factors influencing atypical antipsychotic therapy selection were assessed. Results: Twenty-four psychiatric pharmacists and 18 psychiatrists participated. Mean age was 39.6 years, 57.1% were female. Most clinicians (64.3%) believed medication effectiveness and safety equally important, while 26.2% believed safety and 9.4% believed effectiveness more important. The most important medication properties for schizophrenia were reducing positive symptoms (92.7%) and hospitalizations (87.8%) and for bipolar disorder were reducing manic episodes (87.8%), episode relapse (53.7%), and hospitalizations (53.7%). Agranulocytosis (78.1%), arrhythmias (70.7%), and extrapyramidal side effects (68.3%) were most concerning. Restrictions affected antipsychotic choice at 80.5% of sites and were believed to affect medication adherence (55.0%) and outcomes (53.4%). Conclusion: Efficacy and safety were considered equally important when choosing atypical antipsychotics. Formulary restrictions were perceived as impacting treatment choice and outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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