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Prescribing antipsychotic medication for adults with intellectual disability: shared responsibilities between mental health services and primary care

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2021

Carol Paton*
Affiliation:
Imperial College London, UK Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK
Ashok Roy
Affiliation:
Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS Trust, UK
Kiran Purandare
Affiliation:
Imperial College London, UK Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, UK
Olivia Rendora
Affiliation:
Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK
Thomas R. E. Barnes
Affiliation:
Imperial College London, UK Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK
*
Correspondence to Carol Paton (carol.paton@nhs.net)
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Abstract

Aims and method

We conducted a secondary analysis of data from a Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health audit to assess the quality of requests from intellectual disability services to primary care for repeat prescriptions of antipsychotic medication.

Results

Forty-six National Health Service Trusts submitted treatment data on 977 adults with intellectual disability, receiving antipsychotic medication for more than a year, for whom prescribing responsibility had been transferred to primary care. Therapeutic effects had been monitored in the past 6 months in 80% of cases with a documented communication indicating which service was responsible for this and 72% of those with no such communication. The respective proportions were 69% and 42% for side-effect monitoring, and 79% and 30% for considering reducing/stopping antipsychotic medication.

Clinical implications

Where continuing antipsychotic medication is prescribed in primary care for people with intellectual disability, lack of guidance from secondary care regarding responsibilities for monitoring its effectiveness may be associated with inadequate review.

Type
Original Papers
Creative Commons
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Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Royal College of Psychiatrists

Antipsychotic medication is somewhat commonly prescribed for adults with intellectual disability in the UK and internationally.Reference Sheehan, Hassiotis, Walters, Osborn, Strydom and Horsfall1Reference Koch, Dobrindt and Schützwohl3 Although a proportion of these prescriptions will be for the treatment of schizophrenia, such medication is also prescribed for problem behaviours in the absence of psychotic illness, such as violence, aggression or self-injury.Reference Sheehan, Hassiotis, Walters, Osborn, Strydom and Horsfall1,4Reference Henderson, Mcskimming, Kinnear, McCowan, McIntosh and Allan6 But concerns have been raised about the extent to which antipsychotic medication is prescribed in primary care for challenging behaviour in people with intellectual disability,Reference Sheehan, Hassiotis, Walters, Osborn, Strydom and Horsfall1,Reference Shankar, Wilcock, Oak, McGowan and Sheehan7 particularly for those with no psychiatric diagnosis. The need for careful review of longer-term antipsychotic treatment, with monitoring of both the therapeutic effects and side-effects and consideration of reduction or withdrawal of the medication as appropriate, has been highlighted.Reference Sheehan, Hassiotis, Walters, Osborn, Strydom and Horsfall1,Reference Henderson, Mcskimming, Kinnear, McCowan, McIntosh and Allan6,Reference Paton, Flynn, Shingleton-Smith, MacIntyre, Bhaumik and Rasmussen8

A clinical audit of prescribing practice in 54 UK mental health services, conducted as part of a quality improvement programme, collected information on prescribing for 5654 adults with intellectual disability.Reference Paton, Bhatti, Purandare, Roy and Barnes5 Although the vast majority of those prescribed antipsychotic medication for more than a year had a documented review addressing the clinical benefits of antipsychotic medication, the monitoring of side-effects was limited, with marked variation across participating services. One untested conjecture is whether the inconsistent review and monitoring of such treatment could be partly explained by a lack of clarity about accountability between mental health services and primary care. A planned re-audit as part of the quality improvement programme provided an opportunity to collect information on the communication of such monitoring responsibilities in those cases where the prescribing of antipsychotic medication had been transferred to primary care.

Method

This paper reports a secondary analysis of data from the fourth audit in the quality improvement programme conducted by the Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health (POMH), focusing on the quality of antipsychotic prescribing in adults with intellectual disability under the care of mental health services.9 POMH had invited all 64 member healthcare organisations in the UK to participate in this quality improvement programme. The audit data were collected from clinical records during February and March 2020, by clinicians and clinical audit staff, using a bespoke data collection tool. These data allowed for the assessment of clinical performance against recommended best practice, as derived from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline for challenging behaviour in people with intellectual disability.4,9 The information collected included age, gender, ethnicity, severity of intellectual disability, comorbid psychiatric diagnoses, details of the antipsychotic medication currently prescribed and, for those patients who had received antipsychotic treatment for more than a year, the quality of clinical review addressing the effectiveness of medication (specifically, review of the therapeutic benefit and side-effects and whether there had been any consideration of dosage reduction/discontinuation of such medication). The NICE recommends that such reviews should be conducted every 6 months.4 Further information on POMH methodology is given by Barnes and Paton,Reference Barnes and Paton10 and the methodology of this particular POMH quality improvement programme is described in more detail by Paton et al.Reference Paton, Bhatti, Purandare, Roy and Barnes5,Reference Paton, Flynn, Shingleton-Smith, MacIntyre, Bhaumik and Rasmussen8

In those cases where prescribing responsibility for antipsychotic medication had been transferred to primary care, information was also collected on the quality of communication between mental health services and primary care relating to which service was responsible for monitoring the therapeutic benefit and side-effects, and reviewing whether or not treatment with the medication should continue. We report here only on those cases where prescribing responsibility had been transferred to primary care, and explore whether the quality of the shared-care documentation relating to responsibilities for reviewing antipsychotic medication was associated with such reviews being documented.

Data submission and analysis

Anonymised data were submitted online during February and March 2020, using Formic software version 5.6.1 for Windows (Formic solutions, Uxbridge UK; see http://www.formic.com/survey-software/),11 and analysed with SPSS version 26 for Windows.12 Participating mental health services were sent a copy of their submitted data-set along with any data cleaning queries, allowing data entry errors to be identified and rectified.

Descriptive statistics were used for the demographic and clinical characteristics of the sample of cases for whom antipsychotic medication had been prescribed for more than a year and prescribing responsibility had been transferred from the mental health/intellectual disability team to primary care. Using χ 2-tests, the associations were explored between the existence of clear plans relating to the transfer of prescribing responsibility and documented reviews in the past 6 months of the therapeutic effects and side-effects of antipsychotic medication, and consideration of the continuing need for such medication.

Ethical approval is not required for such audit-based quality improvement initiatives.13 POMH data are managed in accordance with its published privacy notice.14

Results

Forty-six healthcare organisations, predominantly National Health Service Trusts, submitted clinical data on prescribing practice for 977 adults with intellectual disability who had been prescribed antipsychotic medication for more than a year and for whom prescribing responsibility had been transferred to primary care. The demographic and clinical characteristics of this sample are shown in Table 1.

Table 1 Demographic and clinical characteristics of the total national sample of adults with intellectual disability who had been prescribed antipsychotic medication for more than a year, and for whom prescribing responsibility had been transferred to primary care (n = 977)

There were documented communications from mental health services to primary care indicating which service was responsible for monitoring the therapeutic effects of antipsychotic medication in 643 (66%) cases, which service had responsibility for monitoring side-effects in 597 (61%) cases, and which service was responsible for reviewing the need to continue antipsychotic medication in 223 (23%) cases. Responsibility was allocated for all three aspects of monitoring in 178 (18%) cases and for no aspects of monitoring in 252 (26%) cases.

Where plans relating to responsibility for monitoring therapeutic effects had been communicated to primary care (n = 643), a review of this aspect of treatment in the past 6 months had been documented in the clinical records in 515 (80%) cases. Where no such plan had been communicated (n = 334), a review of therapeutic effects had been documented in 240 (72%) cases (P = 0.008). With respect to plans relating to responsibility for monitoring side-effects, the respective figures for documentation that such a review had taken place were 412 of the 597 (69%) cases with documented plans and 158 of the 380 (42%) cases without documented plans (P < 0.001). With respect to plans relating to reviewing the need for continuing antipsychotic medication, the respective figures for documentation of such reviews were 176 of the 223 (79%) cases with documented plans and 227 of the 754 (30%) cases without documented plans (P < 0.001).

The majority of prescriptions of antipsychotic medication for schizophrenia spectrum disorders or affective disorders are likely to be for relapse prevention and therefore long term, so there would not be any expectation that primary care should be considering the discontinuation of such treatment in the short term. When the data on the treatment of patients with these psychiatric diagnoses were removed, 514 cases remained. In 127 (25%) of these cases, plans for reviewing the continuing need for antipsychotic medication had been communicated to primary care, and for most (n = 111, 87%) cases, there was documentation that this aspect of care had been reviewed in the past 6 months. In the 387 cases where no such plans had been communicated, such a review had been documented in just over a third (n = 136, 35%) of cases.

Discussion

In our sample of adults with intellectual disability who were under the care of mental health services but were receiving their prescriptions for continuing antipsychotic medication from primary care, the quality of the clinical correspondence sent by mental health teams to primary care was associated with the quality of clinical review: when there was a clear statement about which service was responsible for reviewing the side-effects and continuing need for antipsychotic treatment, it was much more likely that such reviews had been documented in the previous 6 months.

Plans for reviewing the clinical benefits of antipsychotic medication were communicated to primary care in two-thirds of cases, and such reviews were documented in the mental health clinical records in around three-quarters of cases, with little difference between the subgroup for whom plans had been communicated and the subgroup for whom they had not. The most likely explanation for this finding is that there was an implicit understanding by both mental health services and primary care that the mental health team will be responsible for the continued monitoring of mental state and behaviour. The finding that no clinical plans relating to future reviews of the effectiveness of antipsychotic medication had been communicated to primary care for one patient in four overall is consistent with this interpretation.

Plans for monitoring the side-effects of antipsychotic medication were communicated to primary care in three out of every five cases, only a slightly lower proportion than for plans for monitoring mental state and behaviour. However, where such plans had been clearly communicated, a review of side-effects was >50% more likely to be documented in the previous 6 months than cases where plans had not been communicated. A possible explanation for this finding is that clinicians within mental health teams considered the monitoring of side-effects and the associated physical health checks to be evidently the responsibility of primary care, as an integral part of providing continuing prescriptions for antipsychotic medication, and therefore failed to make this explicit in communications. But where a clear plan for monitoring side-effects is not communicated, primary care may assume that their role is to provide access to antipsychotic medication, with monitoring remaining the responsibility of the mental health team, as part of shared care.

Plans for reviewing the continuing need for antipsychotic medication were communicated to primary care in only a quarter of cases; for cases where such a plan had been communicated, a review of this aspect of care was more than two and a half times more likely to have been documented compared with those cases where there was no such plan. The finding was the same in the subgroup of people with a diagnosed psychotic or affective disorder, for whom continuing antipsychotic medication is likely to be indicated, as well as the subgroup prescribed antipsychotic medication for other indications (including behaviour that challenges), where the rationale for continuing treatment with antipsychotic medication may be far less convincing. This suggests that correspondence with primary care may not consistently and sufficiently address an individual's clinical circumstances and the criteria on which to base a decision to continue or withdraw antipsychotic medication, thus reinforcing any assumption by primary care that determining the need for continuing antipsychotic medication remains the remit of the mental health team. But such an assumption increases the risk that for individuals who are clinically stable and discharged to the sole care of their general practitioner, prescribing may become long-term by default, which may at least explain some of the findings from surveys of practice in primary care.Reference Sheehan, Hassiotis, Walters, Osborn, Strydom and Horsfall1,Reference Henderson, Mcskimming, Kinnear, McCowan, McIntosh and Allan6

Suboptimal communication across the interface between services is not a new issue nor is it specific to intellectual disability services or medication-related issues.Reference Lester16 For people prescribed antipsychotic medication for the treatment of schizophrenia, ‘shared-care’ agreements that clearly outline the responsibilities of primary and secondary care are commonly ratified at a systems level, but we are not aware of any such documents for the use of antipsychotic medication in people with intellectual disability who have behaviour that challenges. Although it would be possible to specify requirements for the monitoring of side-effects within such frameworks, there is insufficient evidence on which to base universal instructions for de-prescribing.Reference Shankar, Wilcock, Oak, McGowan and Sheehan7 Thus, the criteria on which to base decisions to reduce or stop antipsychotic medication in people with intellectual disability need to be individualised and clearly communicated.

In conclusion, when the responsibility for prescribing continuing antipsychotic medication for people with intellectual disability has been transferred to primary care, the monitoring and review of this medication may fall short of recommended best practice. Our findings suggest that this may partly reflect the failure of mental health services to communicate reliably with primary care about the allocation of responsibilities for reviewing antipsychotic medication. This is particularly the case for the monitoring of side-effects and consideration of whether to reduce or discontinue the medication. The use of a formatted letter that prompts inclusion of a clear message about which service is accountable for which aspects of monitoring may be an effective quality improvement intervention.

Strengths and limitations

This study reports on findings related to the treatment of a large national sample of adults with intellectual disability, under the care of mental health services, for whom the continuing prescription of antipsychotic medication had been transferred to primary care. The findings are likely to be representative of UK practice, but should not be extrapolated to other clinical settings or patient groups.

The audit data were collected from secondary care clinical records. Thus, any clinical activity in primary care related to the monitoring and review of antipsychotic medication that had not been communicated to the intellectual disability clinical team and/or not documented in the secondary care clinical records would have been missed. Further, the audit could not determine the extent to which treatment plans included in communications from secondary care had been incorporated into the primary care records.

About the authors

Carol Paton is Joint Head of the Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health at the Centre for Quality Improvement, Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK, and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Division of Psychiatry, Imperial College London, UK. Ashok Roy is a Consultant Psychiatrist and Associate Medical Director at the Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS Trust, UK. Kiran Purandare is an Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer at Imperial College London, UK, and a Consultant in Intellectual Disability at Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, UK. Olivia Rendora is a Project Officer with Prescribing Observatory for Mental Health at the Centre for Quality Improvement, Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK. Thomas R. E. Barnes is a Professor Emeritus of Clinical Psychiatry at the Division of Psychiatry, Imperial College London, UK.

Data availability

POMH data are collected for the purpose of quality improvement and belong to the individual healthcare services that collected and submitted them.

Author contributions

C.P. and T.R.E.B. designed the study. C.P., O.R. and T.R.E.B. were responsible for data analysis. All authors (C.P., A.R., K.P., O.R. and T.R.E.B.) contributed to interpreting the data, drafting the paper and revising it critically for academic content. All authors approved the final version and are accountable for its contents.

Funding

POMH is fully funded by subscriptions from the mental health services in the UK that participate in our quality improvement programmes.

Declaration of interest

None.

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Figure 0

Table 1 Demographic and clinical characteristics of the total national sample of adults with intellectual disability who had been prescribed antipsychotic medication for more than a year, and for whom prescribing responsibility had been transferred to primary care (n = 977)

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