Psychiatric in-patient care in England: as safe as it can be? An examination of in-patient suicide between 2009 and 2020
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Authors
Hunt, I.M
Baird, A
Turnbull, P
Ibrahim, S
Shaw, J
Appleby, L.
Kapur, N
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Issue Date
01/01/2024
Type
Journal Article
Language
Keywords
Mental Health
Alternative Title
Abstract
Background Having a relapse of schizophrenia or recurrent psychosis is feared by patients, can cause social and personal disruption and has been suggested to cause long-term deterioration, possibly because of a toxic biological process. Aims To assess whether relapse affected the social and clinical outcomes of people enrolled in a 24-month randomised controlled trial of antipsychotic medication dose reduction versus maintenance treatment. Methods The trial involved participants with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or recurrent, non-affective psychosis. Relapse was defined as admission to hospital or significant deterioration (assessed by a blinded end-point committee). We analysed the relationship between relapse during the trial and social functioning, quality of life, symptom scores (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale) and rates of being in employment, education or training at 24-month follow-up. We also analysed changes in these measures during the trial among those who relapsed and those who did not. Sensitivity analyses were conducted examining the effects of 'severe' relapse (i.e. admission to hospital). Results During the course of the trial, 82 out of 253 participants relapsed. There was no evidence for a difference between those who relapsed and those who did not on changes in social functioning, quality of life, symptom scores or overall employment rates between baseline and 24-month follow-up. Those who relapsed showed no change in their social functioning or quality of life, and a slight improvement in symptoms compared to baseline. They were more likely than those who did not relapse to have had a change in their employment status (mostly moving out of employment, education or training), although numbers changing status were small. Sensitivity analyses showed the same results for those who experienced a 'severe' relapse. Conclusions Our data provide little evidence that relapse has a detrimental effect in the long term in people with schizophrenia and recurrent psychosis.
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Citation
Psychological Medicine. 2024;54(8):1702-1708. doi:10.1017/S0033291723003628
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Journal
Psychological Medicine
Volume
54
Issue
8
