Introduction
Clinical concerns regarding misdiagnosis and unsafe use of psychotropic medication in youth attending a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) in South Kerry, Ireland precipitated a ‘look back review’ (LBR) of all open cases (over 1,300) between July 2016 and April 2021. The findings, published as the ‘Maskey report’ (MR) in January 2022, identified 240 children whose care ‘did not meet acceptable standards’ and 46 with ‘clear evidence of significant harm’ (Maskey Reference Maskey2022). Specific concerns were raised regarding a non-consultant hospital doctor (NCHD)’s prescription and monitoring of medications, diagnostic practice, and extent of clinical supervision offered/received and actioned.
The Health Service Executive (HSE), Ireland’s publicly funded healthcare system, responded by commissioning an independent national prescribing audit (Health Service Executive 2023) and the establishment of a compensatory scheme for families (Health Service Executive 2022). The minister of state responsible for mental health in Ireland, Mary Butler, referred to the findings as ‘shocking and disturbing’, and requested the Mental Health Commission (MHC) to conduct an all-Ireland CAMHS review (Kelleher & Cullen Reference Kelleher and Cullen2022).
The MR was widely reported in the Irish media, referencing CAMHS as ‘not fit for purpose’ (Cosgrave Reference Cosgrave2022), adding to the sense of distress among families and public, and leading to urgent calls for CAMHS reform. Although some commentaries placed the failure at the hands of the HSE and Minsters within the Department of Health, other contributors referenced medical negligence and disciplinary action (O’Mahony Reference O’Mahony2022), proposing the view that ‘mental health services must be prised from [the] grip of psychiatry’ (MacLachlan Reference MacLachlan2023). Public anger, directed at both CAMHS and those delivering the service may have negatively impacted caregivers of youth attending CAMHS, however, to date, this has not been researched.
Aim
The aim of this ‘Maskey Impact Study’ (MIS) was to explore changes to child and adolescent psychiatrists’ prescribing practices following the MR.
Methods
The study was cross-sectional and mixed methods in design. Following ethical approval, a study specific questionnaire was distributed electronically via Google Forms by the College of Psychiatrists of Ireland to all consultants, clinical fellows and senior registrars working in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (n = 160), with a reminder email sent four weeks later (April–May 2023). All responses were anonymised. The strengthening the reporting of observational studies in epidemiology cross-sectional checklist (von Elm et al. Reference von Elm, Altman, Egger, Pocock, Gøtzsche and Vandenbroucke2007) has shaped the reporting of the data.
Demographic details collected included position, work setting, public or private commitment and contract type. Participants were asked to rate any changes to their actual prescribing practices and stress levels at work post-MR. They reported on engagement in continuous professional development (CPD) access and psychiatry training opportunities for NCHDs, and public and patient/caregiver perceptions of CAMHS. All responses used a seven-point Likert scale with the option for free text responses for qualitative data.
Statistical analysis was carried out using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 22.0. Descriptive data were calculated for each variable. Associations between psychiatrists’ changes in prescribing practices with demographic factors, views on public, patient/caregiver perceptions of CAMHS, stress levels since the MR and perceptions of CPD access and psychotropic medication training opportunities for NCHDs were analysed using Pearson’s chi-squared test. Fisher’s exact test statistic was used when expected frequencies were observed to be less than 5. The p-value was set at 0.05. Thematic analysis was conducted to capture frequently cited and meaningful information from free text relevant to prescribing practices (Braun & Clarke, Reference Braun and Clarke2006).
Results
A total of 102 psychiatrists responded (63.8% response rate). The majority of child and adolescent psychiatrists were from the public sector (91.2%), the majority identifying as consultants (n = 70, 68.6%) with the remaining 32 as NCHDs (31.4%). Most psychiatrists worked in community CAMHS (88.2%) with a small number working as liaison child and adolescent psychiatrists (7.8%) or in inpatient units (4.0%). More than half (n = 56, 54.9%) were on a permanent contract. Demographics are summarised in Table 1.
Changes in prescribing practices since the Maskey report
Since the MR, psychiatrists reported several changes to their prescribing practices in terms of documentation, communication, monitoring, and prescribing practices (Table 2). Prior to commencing medication, most psychiatrists (n = 62, 60.8%) stated they were more vigilant of medical monitoring for patients on psychotropic medication with most (n = 59, 57.8%) being more likely to align their prescribing and monitoring practice to international, national, or organisational guidelines. Most psychiatrists (n = 58, 56.9%) reported being more likely to refer to the literature for updated prescribing information.
Most psychiatrists reported an increased tendency to document clinical indications (n = 65, 63.7%) and caregiver consent (n = 55, 53.9%) prior to prescribing, with some (n = 42, 41.2%) more likely than before to provide parents with medication information leaflets. Whilst most psychiatrists (n = 63, 61.8%) reported no change in informing the general practitioner (GP) when psychotropic medication was commenced or the dose altered, more than a third (n = 39, 38.2%) felt this behaviour had increased post-MR.
Half of psychiatrists (n = 51, 50%) were more likely to avoid off-label use when prescribing and half (n = 51, 50%) were more likely to prescribe in accordance with regulatory bodies such as Food and Drug Administration (FDA), United Kingdom (UK) or the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in Republic of Ireland (ROI). Rates of polypharmacy were also perceived to have reduced post-MR, with almost half of psychiatrists (n = 43, 42.2%) reporting that they were less likely to consider prescribing more than one medication at the same time. Whilst half of psychiatrists (n = 57, 55.9%) reported no change to their prescribing post-MR, a significant proportion (n = 44, 43.1%) felt they were less likely to prescribe psychotropic medication even when clinically indicated, with no significant difference by seniority.
Eighty-two (80.4%) of respondents perceived their stress level to have increased post-MR. Higher stress levels were significantly associated with increased reticence in prescribing (χ 2 (n = 102, 1) = 11.746, p < .001), in that those who reported increased stress were more reluctant to prescribe. Psychiatrists who were more stressed were also more likely to restrict their prescribing practice to recognised clinical guidelines (χ 2 = (n = 102;1) = 7.909, p = 0.005), FDA, UK MHRA and/or ROI regulations, (χ 2 = (n = 102; 1) = 8.956, p = 0.003) and more likely to avoid off-label use (χ 2 = (n = 100; 1) = 15.392, p < 0.001).
An overwhelming majority of respondents believed that there was a worsening of public (n = 94, 92.2%) or parent (n = 71, 69.6%) perception of CAMHS following the publication of the MR (see Table 2). Those who perceived the MR was linked with a worsening of public perception of CAMHS were also less likely to prescribe, even when clinically indicated. (χ 2= (n = 102, 1) = 20.22, p < 0.001) and were more likely to avoid off-label use (χ 2 = (n = 102, 1) = 10.074, p = 0.039).
Over half, (52, 51.0%) felt that there was inadequate psychotropic medication training for NCHDs and a minority (15, 14.7%) increased their own engagement with CPD activities post-MR. Referring to the literature when prescribing psychotropic medication was significantly positively associated with lower engagement with CPD activities (χ 2 = 6.364, p = 0.042) and poorer perceptions of psychotropic medication NCHD training (χ 2 = 12.579, p = 0.002). Increased reference to the literature was also more likely to have had increased in psychiatrists who were working in public settings (χ 2 = 4.829, p = 0.028) and having a locum contract (χ 2 = 10.209, p = 0.017).
Themes that emerged using the free text responses were ‘anxiety related to prescribing,’ ‘public mistrust’, and ‘administrative burden’. Regarding anxiety relating to prescribing, respondents reported that they were now ‘very reluctant to prescribe medications and have adopted a defensive approach to clinical practice’ with ‘doctors (especially) more on edge when trying to do the right thing with medication use’. Some perceived this to be linked to ‘increased fear of complaint, litigation, or poor clinical outcomes due to non-adherence to prescribed medication’.
Respondents reported that mistrust in medications use had increased among patients and families, stating that ‘it was already difficult to get the trust of families, particularly when it comes to necessary medication, but this has undermined it further’ and reports that some ‘people immediately stopped their child’s ADHD medication’. Hesitancy in prescribing off-license medication was evident in open ended comments, such as ‘[Post MR] made me more defensive and less willing to prescribe off-license even when such practice would be reasonable’ and a complete avoidance in some cases; ‘frankly I will avoid at all costs prescribing risperidone to children with ASD and behavioural difficulties!’. The added administrative duties, describes as ‘a farce of paperwork due to fearing nonadherence to the Standard Operating Procedure and MHC’ created an onerous burden adding additional work pressures, at the expense of ‘time which could have been better spent clinically’. Such additional duties left some psychiatrists feeling ‘burnt out and fed up with being audited’.
Discussion
This is the first study to explore changes in the practice and attitudes of child and adolescent psychiatrists psychotropic prescribing following on from the HSE LBR and MR (Maskey Reference Maskey2022). This study identified many improved prescribing practices among CAMHS psychiatrists including the extent to which psychiatrists documented clinical indications for medication, gathered informed consent and shared prescribing changes with GPs. Psychiatrists also reported they were more likely to refer to the literature, prescribe within accepted clinical or regulatory parameters, avoid polypharmacy, and share psychoeducational material with families. They were also more likely to report higher vigilance with respect to physical health monitoring. These practices are welcome, consistent with safe and judicious use of medication, and recognised as an area in need of improvement in the recent national audit on prescribing practices of CAMHS (Health Service Executive 2023). Whether these self-reported perceived improved practices will translate into improvements in subsequent audits remains to be seen.
However, this study also highlighted some areas of concern, most notably, an increase in psychiatrists’ anxiety around prescribing psychotropic medications with almost half (43.1%) hesitant to prescribe even when clinically indicated. Respondents spoke of ‘fear’ and adopting ‘a defensive attitude to prescribing’. This is despite growing evidence from controlled trials of psychotropic medication efficacy in youth for most psychiatric disorders (Correll et al. Reference Correll, Cortese, Croatto, Monaco, Krinitski, Arrondo, Ostinelli, Zangani, Fornaro, Estradé, Fusar-Poli, Carvalho and Solmi2021). The practice of polypharmacy, prescription of two or more psychiatric medications, was perceived to have reduced post Maskey Report. Given the paucity of research in paediatric polypharmacy, despite the significant increase over the past 25 years (Zito et al. Reference Zito, Zhu and Safer2021), it is prudent to be mindful of the need to limit concomitant use of drugs, reducing the risk of additional and interactive adverse effects. Rates of polypharmacy in psychiatry range from 13% to 90%, (Kukreja et al. Reference Kukreja, Kalra, Shah and Shrivastava2013), and notwithstanding the need to adopt a conservative and ‘n of 1’ trial approach especially in paediatric polypharmacy (Jureidini et al. Reference Jureidini, Tonkin and Jureidini2013), a blanket avoidance of combination therapy is also not without negative results. Using more than one medication at any one time may be necessary, advantageous, and supported by various clinical guidelines, especially for hard to treat or comorbid cases. This is the case especially for ADHD, one of the most common reasons for attendance in CAMHS and a disorder with the largest amount of evidence for effective medication use (Baker et al. Reference Baker, Huefner, Bellonci, Hilt and Carlson2021).
In this study, half of the psychiatrists reported that they were more likely to avoid off-label prescribing. This is despite much of the prescribing in child and adolescent psychiatry being off label (Meng et al. Reference Meng, Lv, Wang, Yang, Jiao, Lei, Lan, Shen, Luo, Zhou and Yu2022; Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Arango, Coghill, Gringras, Nutt, Pratt, Young and Hollis2016) and most of hospital and primary care paediatric prescribing also being off label (Kimland & Odlind Reference Kimland and Odlind2012). Off-label use is driven by the high costs of conducting paediatric research and low returns to pharmaceutic companies, and is in and of itself, not synonymous with adverse effects or low efficacy. Some researchers believe that depriving patients of medications based on off-label status may be more disadvantageous than any potential adverse effects experienced (van der Zanden et al. Reference van der Zanden, Smeets, de Hoop-Sommen, Schwerzel, Huang, Barten, van der Heijden, Freriksen, Horstink, Holsappel and Mooij2022).
The highlighting of unsafe prescribing practices identified in the MR may have increased psychiatrists’ awareness and concern with off-label prescribing due to misconceptions of safety and medico-legal issues, and ‘increased fear of complaint, [and] litigation’. A potential and unintended consequence of this is that effective and safe drug treatments may be withheld or underused. With respect to product license use, Sharma and colleagues (2016) caution us that restricting prescribing to product license use does not guarantee safety and in some cases an off-label alternative may be more appropriate and safer. Additionally, when off-label prescribing is supported by an evidence base and/or a clinical guideline, such practice is easily defensible (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Arango, Coghill, Gringras, Nutt, Pratt, Young and Hollis2016). Prudence would suggest that when faced with low levels of evidence, off-label prescribing should be accompanied by a second opinion to support such decisions (Sharma et al. Reference Sharma, Arango, Coghill, Gringras, Nutt, Pratt, Young and Hollis2016).
Respondents in this survey also reported a perception of increased patient and family reluctance to consider psychotropic medication and this is not surprising given the widespread media reporting of ‘risky’ or ‘unsafe’ medication practice (BreakingNews, 2022), and significant elaboration on the myriad of adverse side effects linked to medications, often given without any prevalence data. Parental challenges surrounding medication use in children with ADHD in Ireland have already been reported. (Flood et al. Reference Flood, Hayden, Gavin and McNicholas2019). High levels of parental guilt at initiation of medication, uncertainty, and doubt regarding medication short- and longer-term effects, and lack of confidence in risk/benefit decisions exist alongside recognition of positive medication response, growing agency, and acceptability with medication use. The ‘abrupt’ discontinuation of medication reported by this survey, especially in youth with ADHD, when coupled with the already low prescription rates and low adherence among youth in general is a cause for concern (Edgcomb & Zima Reference Edgcomb and Zima2018). Non-adherence can significantly disrupt a young person’s life and development through untreated mental illness and associated social, education and occupational impairments (Emilsson et al. Reference Emilsson, Gustafsson, Öhnström and Marteinsdottir2017; Nagae et al. Reference Nagae, Nakane, Honda, Ozawa and Hanada2015). Furthermore, given difficulties in accessing other non-pharmaceutical treatment, and the post-code lottery with an “unacceptable variation” across CAMHS in Ireland (Mental Health Commission 2023), other effective treatment may also be beyond the reach of youth, leaving a child vulnerable to no effective treatment and services just “handholding”. Whilst the reported increased hesitancy in families and reluctance to take medication was somewhat counterbalanced by the psychiatrist’s admission of increased information sharing and increased discussion of the clinical indications for medication, it is likely that focused work will be needed to increase both service users and public trust in effective use of medication. Previous research in Ireland highlighted that public opinion regarding psychotropic prescribing along with a lack of psychiatrists’ confidence represents a major barrier to effective prescribing (McNicholas et al. Reference McNicholas, Orakwue-Ononye and O’Hanrahan2014).
Safe psychotropic prescribing for some medications requires regular physical monitoring of vital signs, anthropometrics, blood tests and ECGs. The lack of availability of such services requires CAMHS to rely on service users’ GPs or general hospitals. The national audit of CAMHS carried out by the Mental Health Commission identified less than accepted standards for physical monitoring and attributed the reliance on others, and the lack of electronic health records, to be contributory. (Health Service Executive 2023; Mental Health Commission 2023). Many psychiatrists in this survey suggested the establishment of dedicated CAMHS physical health monitoring clinics. The advantages of a standardised physical monitoring approach have already been within CAMHS eating disorder (Walsh & McNicholas Reference Walsh and McNicholas2020) and ADHD (Rice et al. Reference Rice, Walsh, Gallagher, Munro and McGuinness2023) services.
Strengths and limitations
The study’s strengths include a high response rate, with respondents drawn from public and private sector across various CAMHS settings. The mixed methods design allowed the personal impact following the lock back review to be captured, providing a context for the quantitative data. The cross-sectional design limits any inference on causality and the retrospective and self-report methods used carry a risk of responder recall bias.
Conclusion
The look back review conducted by Dr Sean Maskey triggered a national review of CAMHS across Ireland, with the intention of examining and ensuring safe clinical practice. Research of attendee’s experiences in CAMHS has also been promised, along with the establishment of a compensation scheme for those adversely affected by unsafe care. However, the experiences of those providing CAMHS and doctors at whom such ‘unsafe’ and ‘risky’ prescribing practices are being levelled, also need to be heard. This ‘Maskey Impact Study’ has addressed this gap. The MIS revealed a welcome improvement in prescribing practices among respondents with increased vigilance in monitoring and reference to existing guidelines. However, the MIS also uncovered a hesitant and cautious approach to medication use with potential unintended consequences. A reduction in appropriate prescribing deprives CAMHS patients of effective treatments and trainees from exposure to effective consultant-led prescribing practice. National clinical prescribing guidelines, regular high-quality training in psychopharmacology and increasing public awareness of the evidence base are all urgently needed to redress the lack of trust in both CAMHS and medication regimes.
Financial support
None.
Competing interests
None.
Ethical standards
Ethical approval was granted by University College Dublin on the 7th of March 2023 [LS-LR-23-54-BOND-MCNICHOLAS].
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committee on human experimentation with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.