Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- Completing an audit project
- I Disorders
- II Legislation
- III Physical health
- IV Record-keeping
- V Service provision
- VI Training
- VII Treatment
- 73 Alcohol withdrawal: management
- 74 Anticholinesterase inhibitors: monitoring of cardiac side-effects
- 75 Anticholinesterase inhibitors: prescribing
- 76 Antimuscarinic medications
- 77 Antipsychotics: combined and high dose
- 78 Antipsychotics: prescribing
- 79 Antipsychotics: use in dementia
- 80 Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: prescribing
- 81 Atypical antipsychotics: monitoring
- 82 Behavioural problems in adults with intellectual disabilities: medication management
- 83 Benzodiazepines in old age psychiatry
- 84 Covert administration of medication
- 85 Depot antipsychotics: side-effects
- 86 Diazepam as rescue medication in epilepsy
- 87 Electroconvulsive therapy: facilities
- 88 Electroconvulsive therapy: indications
- 89 Hypnotics
- 90 Lithium: monitoring
- 91 Medicines reconciliation
- 92 Mood stabilisers: monitoring
- 93 Nurses’ administration of medication
- 94 Prescribing: British National Formulary limits
- 95 Prescribing: Mental Capacity Act
- 96 Prescribing: p.r.n. medication
- 97 Prescription charts
- 98 Psychological therapies
- 99 Psychotherapy re-referrals
- 100 Psychotropic prescriptions in dual diagnosis
- 101 Rapid tranquillisation
- Appendices
73 - Alcohol withdrawal: management
from VII - Treatment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editors
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- Completing an audit project
- I Disorders
- II Legislation
- III Physical health
- IV Record-keeping
- V Service provision
- VI Training
- VII Treatment
- 73 Alcohol withdrawal: management
- 74 Anticholinesterase inhibitors: monitoring of cardiac side-effects
- 75 Anticholinesterase inhibitors: prescribing
- 76 Antimuscarinic medications
- 77 Antipsychotics: combined and high dose
- 78 Antipsychotics: prescribing
- 79 Antipsychotics: use in dementia
- 80 Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: prescribing
- 81 Atypical antipsychotics: monitoring
- 82 Behavioural problems in adults with intellectual disabilities: medication management
- 83 Benzodiazepines in old age psychiatry
- 84 Covert administration of medication
- 85 Depot antipsychotics: side-effects
- 86 Diazepam as rescue medication in epilepsy
- 87 Electroconvulsive therapy: facilities
- 88 Electroconvulsive therapy: indications
- 89 Hypnotics
- 90 Lithium: monitoring
- 91 Medicines reconciliation
- 92 Mood stabilisers: monitoring
- 93 Nurses’ administration of medication
- 94 Prescribing: British National Formulary limits
- 95 Prescribing: Mental Capacity Act
- 96 Prescribing: p.r.n. medication
- 97 Prescription charts
- 98 Psychological therapies
- 99 Psychotherapy re-referrals
- 100 Psychotropic prescriptions in dual diagnosis
- 101 Rapid tranquillisation
- Appendices
Summary
Setting
This audit may be particularly relevant to liaison psychiatry services involved in the management of patients with alcohol dependency in the general hospital setting. It may also be relevant to mental health in-patient units managing patients in alcohol withdrawal.
Background
Poorly managed alcohol detoxification can cause distress to individuals and their carers, and increase referral rates to liaison psychiatry services. Individuals who have undergone inadequate detoxification are less likely to engage in subsequent alcohol rehabilitation. Thiamine deficiency secondary to alcohol dependency can lead to permanent neurological damage such as Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome. Appropriate alcohol detoxification and vitamin prophylaxis are crucial in preventing these problems.
Standards
Standards were obtained from guidelines for the pharmacological management of alcohol withdrawal published by the Royal College of Physicians (2001) and the British Association for Psychopharmacology (Lingford-Hughes et al, 2004). The hospital guidelines derived from these documents are detailed in Appendix 2 to this book.
ᐅ For alcohol detoxification, prescriptions were judged to meet the standard if either chlordiazepoxide or diazepam was prescribed as a reducing regimen for an adequate duration.
ᐅ For vitamin prophylaxis, prescriptions met the standard if the dose, route and duration were in accordance with the guidelines.
Method
Data collection
For the duration of the audit, members of the general hospital liaison psychiatry team visited the acute admission wards daily to identify patients who had been prescribed an alcohol detoxification regime by the admitting medical or surgical team. Ward staff and hospital pharmacists cooperated in identifying such patients. Individual patients’ prescription charts were assessed against the standards. In the first audit cycle, 27 prescription charts were scrutinised. Following a period of intervention, a second audit cycle scrutinised a further 22 prescription charts.
Data analysis
For each audit cycle, the percentage of charts where the prescription was judged to be in accordance with the guidelines was calculated for:
ᐅ alcohol detoxification
ᐅ vitamin prophylaxis.
Resources required
People
It is suggested that this audit is undertaken by at least two people, owing to the amount of information collected and the possible need to confer over cases where the adequacy of the prescription is unclear.
Time
For one audit cycle scrutinising 20–25 prescription charts, it is estimated that the data collection would take 15 hours.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- 101 Recipes for Audit in Psychiatry , pp. 177 - 178Publisher: Royal College of PsychiatristsPrint publication year: 2011