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Everything you need to know about Mental Health in 60 minutes…. Dr Tom Tasker GP with Special Interest in Mental Health NHS Salford . Overview. Antidepressants New NICE guidance Improving Access To Psychological Therapies (IAPT) Stepped Care Model Physical health in SMI Case Studies.
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Everything you need to know about Mental Health in 60 minutes… Dr Tom Tasker GP with Special Interest in Mental Health NHS Salford
Overview • Antidepressants • New NICE guidance • Improving Access To Psychological Therapies (IAPT) • Stepped Care Model • Physical health in SMI • Case Studies
When – Depression • Mild (PHQ-9: < 10) • Avoid • Unless: • Past h/o severe depression • Not responding to other interventions • Moderate(PHQ-9: 10 – 19) • Consider • Discuss with patient • Severe (PHQ-9: 20+) • Encourage to take • Evidence best for comb’n of AD + Psychological therapy
When – Anxiety Disorders • Mild/moderate • Avoid • Psychological Therapy 1st line (NICE) • Moderate/severe • Consider if loss of function • Should be an adjunct to Psychological therapies
When – Depression/anxiety • If depression is accompanied by marked anxiety…. • TREAT DEPRESSION FIRST • Consider AD as appropriate
Draft NICE guidance re ADs • Generic SSRI 1st line • Efficacy • Better tolerated • Favourable risk-benefit ratio • Less likely to be discontinued because of side effects • Low acquisition-cost • (Paroxetine: higher rate of discontinuation symptoms)
Draft NICE Guidance for ADs • 2nd line: • Different SSRI • Better tolerated newer generation AD • Combining ADs • Remit of GPSI/psychiatrist • SSRI plus mirtazapine • Do not initiate dosulepin • Increased cardiac risk • Toxicity in OD
Draft NICE guidance for ADS • What is the best strategy following 6-8 weeks of adequate treatment? • Suggest RCT to assess: • Continuing same/increasing dose of SSRI • Switch to another SSRI • Switch to AD of different class
Which – Depression (Salford) • 1st line: • Sertraline • 2nd line • Change class • Mirtazapine • Venlafaxine • Duloxetine
Which – Anxiety (Salford) • 1st Line • Citalopram • 2nd line • Escitalopram • Venlafaxine
Cost per monthly prescriptions • Fluoxetine 20mg 69p • Citalopram 20mg £1.24 • Sertraline 50mg £1.37 • Escitalopram 10/20mg £15/£25 • Mirtazapine 30/45mg £3.28 - £19 • Duloxetine 60mg £27.72 • Venaxx/venlalic 75–225mg £10 - £30
Good prescribing tips • Considerations • Length of initial prescription • Toxicity in overdose • When to review • Careful in < 30 years old
Good prescribing tips • How often to review? • (1) week • 2 weeks • 4 or 5 weeks • 8 weeks • 12 weeks • 1 – 2 monthly thereafter
Good prescribing tips • When to consider increasing dose? • No response – 2-3 weeks • Partial response – 4 – 6 weeks • Switch after 4-6w if unsatisfactory response
Good prescribing tips • How long to treat for? • At least 6 months after remission • If recurrent consider 1 – 2 years • Consider acute v repeat prescriptions • Try to avoid ADs in bereavement (except in past h/o depression)
Good prescribing tips • Tricyclics • Avoid subtherapeutic doses • Helps anxiety symptoms but not depression • Avoid dosulepin altogether • No new initiations • Consider switching
How much is being invested in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme in the next 3 years? • A £173,000 • C £ 17.3million • B £1.73 million • D £173 million
How much is being invested in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme in the next 3 years? • D £173 million
Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) • Comprehensive Spending Review 2007 • £30 million in 2008/9 • £70 million in 2009/10 • £70 million in 2010/11
1st wave - IAPT 2008/9 • 35 pilot sites in 2008/9 • 5 sites in NW SHA • Salford – 26 new trainees • 11 Low Intensity (Graduate Workers) • 15 High intensity (CBT workers)
IAPT • NICE-compliant (Stepped care model) • Step up/down as necessary • Step 2 • Low Intensity Interventions • Step 3 • High Intensity Interventions (CBT, IPT) • Step 4 • Non-IAPT (Psychology Services)
Low Intensity Workers • Low intensity interventions - Medication management • Behavioural activation • Problem-solving • Guided self-management • Brief CBT • Signposting • 4 – 6 sessions x 30 minutes
Stepped Care Model • Framework in which to organise services • Aim is to provide the least intrusive, most effective intervention first • Patients should enter at the step that is appropriate to them but generally the least intensive • Patients can be stepped up or down as necessary
Physical Health & SMI • Life expectancy • Reduced by 10 – 15 years • Younger patients at very high risk compared with general population • Cardiovascular Disease • Mortality in excess of 2x that of general population • Diabetes • Up to 5x that of general population
Other health related issues • Health inequalities • Lifestyle • Smoking • 61% schizophrenia, 46% BPD • (Social Exclusion Unit Report - Mental health and social exclusion) 2004 • Alcohol & Drug Misuse • Obesity • Metabolic Syndrome • Hyperprolactinaemia
Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Schizophrenia 1Davidson et al. Aust NZ J Psychiatry. 2001;35:196–202;2Herran et al. Schizophr Res. 2000;4:373–381; 3Dixon et al. Schizophr Bull. 2000;26:903–912;4Kato et al. PrimCare Companion J Clin Psychiatry. 2005;7:115–118
Metabolic Syndrome (IDF Definition 2005) • Metabolic syndrome defined as criterion one plus any two of next four criteria: IDF = International Diabetes Federation; HDL = High-density Lipoprotein; Available at www.idf.org
70 59.6 60 50 50 40 Prevalence (%) 28.1 30 22.4 20 10 6.2 4.6 0 Overweight Obese Healthy Overweight Obese Healthy BMI 25–29.9 BMI ≥30 BMI <25 BMI 25–29.9 BMI ≥30 BMI <25 Men Women Prevalence of Metabolic Syndrome According to BMI n=12,363 BMI = Body Mass Index Park et al. Arch Intern Med. 2003;163:427–436
Prevalence of Obesity is Increased in Schizophrenia Schizophrenia No schizophrenia 30 Normal weight 25 Overweight Obese 20 Percentage 15 10 5 0 <20 20–22 >22–25 >28–30 >30–33 >33–35 >35 >26–28 >24–26 BMI category BMI = Body Mass Index Allison et al. J Clin Psychiatry. 1999;60:215–220
Metabolic Syndrome Increases Total and Cardiovascular Mortality *** 20 Metabolic syndrome present 18.0 Metabolic syndrome absent 18 16 *** 14 12.0 12 10 Mortality (%) 8 6 4.6 4 2.2 2 0 Total mortality CV mortality Median follow-up: 6.9 years ***p<0.001 vs. patients without metabolic syndrome CV = Cardiovascular Isomaa et al. Diabetes Care. 2001;24:683–689
Prevalence of Diabetes in Schizophrenia vs. General Population Prevalence (%) 15–35 25–35 35–45 45–55 55–65 Age range (years) n=415 patients with schizophrenia De Hert et al. Clin Pract Epidemiol Mental Health. 2006;2:14
Osborn et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry Vol 64 Feb 2007 • 46 136 people with SMI • 300 426 without SMI were selected for the study • Hazard ratios (HRs) in people with SMI compared with controls were: for CHD mortality • 3.22 (95% CI, 1.99-5.21) for people 18 - 49 yrs • 1.86 (95% CI, 1.63-2.12) for those 50 - 75 yrs • 1.05 (95% CI, 0.92-1.19) for those > 75 yrs
Osborn et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry Feb 2007 • For stroke deaths, the HRs were: • 2.53 (95% CI, 0.99-6.47) for those < 50 yrs • 1.89 (95% CI, 1.50-2.38) for 50 - 75 yrs • 1.34 (95% CI, 1.17-1.54) for > 75 yrs
Further Findings from Osborn et al, 2007 • Increased HRs for CHD mortality occurred irrespective of: • sex • SMI diagnosis • Or prescription of antipsychotic medication • However a higher prescribed dose of antipsychotics predicted greater risk of mortality from CHD and stroke
Other Common Physical Health Problems • People with schizophrenia are also at increased risk for: • Hyperprolactinaemia • Particularly associated with conventional antipsychotics, risperidone, amisulpride • Sexual dysfunction • May also be a consequence of conventional antipsychotic therapy; the causal link with atypical antipsychotics is less clear
Mental Health Indicator 9 -Annual Physical Health Check • Alcohol & drug misuse • Smoking • BMI/waist circumference • BP • Diabetes screening • Lipid profiles in patients • > 40 years • Those on atypical antipsychotics
Mental Health Indicator 9 -Other issues to consider • Cervical Screening • Dental & Eye Care • Imms & Vaccs • Medication compliance & side effects
Mental Health Indicator 6 - Psychiatry Care Plan • Check contact details for: • Main Carer • Care Co-coordinator & all key people involved in care • Check follow up arrangements with specialist mental health services • Check patient awareness of early signs of relapse • Check patient’s preferred course of action in event of relapse • Social situation • CAB, Welfare, Benefits
Salford Initiatives • Shared Care Protocol for Atypical Antipsychotics • Tackling DNA rates for physical health checks
SCP for Atypical Antipsychotics • Incentivised scheme • 3 visits: • – baseline to be done by specialist MHS • 3m & 6m checks to be done in Primary Care • Annually thereafter as part of QOF • At each visit: • BMI/waist • BP • Fasting BS • Fasting lipids (not at 3m visit)
Salford CMHT Initiatives • Care Programme Approach • Current CPA amended • Physical Illness Domain to be extended to include physical health check • Care coordinator role • Pivotal • Responsibility to ensure health check has been done
Follow up of DNA’s • If patient DNAs their annual physical health check: • Requirement under QuOF (MH 7) • GP to cc DNA letter to care coordinator • Care coordinator to follow up
“Hard to reach” SMI patients • CHUG (Cromwell House User group meeting): • No previous dialogue re physical health • Interested in physical health • Education, awareness • Prefer to undergo check in CMHT • Don’t like attending GP surgeries • Don’t like environment • Stigmatised • Physical symptoms attributed to SMI • Not listened to
Survey • Service User Representative: • Wider report to looked at: • How to deliver promotional campaign: • raise awareness • education • Check out why they won’t attend GP • How to facilitate attendance at GP surgeries • Types of interventions they want to see at CMHT level
Results of Survey • 48 responses: • Education – want to talk to Care co-ordinator (rather than leaflets/posters) • 70% had a physical health check in past 15m • >90% of checks done at GP surgery • Reassured – GP knows about physical health • Barriers: • Getting appointment • GP running late