Abstract

BackgroundThe widely established treatment for psychosis is long-term antipsychotic medication. However, many people stop taking this treatment, and request other options. There are also growing concerns about adverse effects, but currently no professional guidelines to support reducing or stopping these drugs. The views and experiences of individual mental health professionals around reducing and stopping antipsychotics are therefore crucial in treatment decisions.MethodsWe conducted 7 focus groups with prescribing psychiatrists and other members of community-based statutory mental health services in London. Participants discussed their views about, experiences, and processes of antipsychotic reduction and discontinuation. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsParticipants acknowledged that antipsychotics can have severe adverse effects. They were generally supportive of trying to reduce these drugs to the lowest effective dose, although stopping antipsychotics was less acceptable. Prior experiences of adverse events after reduction or discontinuation meant that both were approached with caution. Reduction was also reported to be hampered by organisational and knowledge barriers. Lack of resources, pressure to discharge, and poor continuity of care were seen as organisational barriers. Knowledge barriers included inadequate evidence about who might be best suited to reduction, and lack of guidance about how this could be done safely. This meant that reduction was often prompted by patients, and sometimes actively discouraged, and stability with maintenance treatment was often favoured.ConclusionsConcerns about risk and other barriers means that clinicians are often reluctant to implement reduction or discontinuation of antipsychotic medication. In order to increase the treatment options available to service users, more research and guidance on how to minimise the risks of antipsychotic reduction and discontinuation is required to enable clinicians to engage more constructively with service users requests, offering people more choice and control in managing their mental health condition.

Highlights

  • Antipsychotics are the primary treatment for people who experience psychosis and are prescribed to most service users [1]

  • Participants acknowledged that antipsychotics can have severe adverse effects

  • Concerns about risk and other barriers means that clinicians are often reluctant to implement reduction or discontinuation of antipsychotic medication

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Summary

Introduction

Antipsychotics are the primary treatment for people who experience psychosis and are prescribed to most service users [1]. Concerns include cardiovascular problems [10], weight gain, diabetes [11,12], brain volume reduction [13], tardive dyskinesia, and sexual dysfunction [14,15]. Alongside this up to a third of service users do not respond to these drugs [16]. Many people stop taking antipsychotics of their own accord [17,18], do not take them as prescribed, or would like more choice about how much medication they take and for how long [19]

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