Development and acceptability testing of a decision aid for considering whether to reduce antipsychotics in individuals with stable schizophrenia

Author:

Aoki Yumi12ORCID,Takaesu Yoshikazu23ORCID,Matsui Kentaro4,Tokumasu Takahiro5,Tani Hideaki6,Takekita Yoshiteru7,Kanazawa Tetsufumi8,Kishimoto Taishiro69,Tarutani Seiichiro10,Hashimoto Naoki11,Takeuchi Hiroyoshi6,Mishima Kazuo12,Inada Ken13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, Graduate School of Nursing St. Luke's International University Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Neuropsychiatry Kyorin University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Graduate School of Medicine University of the Ryukyus Okinawa Japan

4. Department of Clinical Laboratory National Center Hospital, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry Tokyo Japan

5. Department of Psychiatry Showa University Northern Yokohama Hospital Kanagawa Japan

6. Department of Neuropsychiatry Keio University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

7. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Kansai Medical University Osaka Japan

8. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University Osaka Japan

9. Hills Joint Research Laboratory for Future Preventive Medicine and Wellness Keio University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

10. Department of Psychiatry Shin‐Abuyama Hospital, Osaka Institute of Clinical Psychiatry Osaka Japan

11. Department of Psychiatry Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine Hokkaido Japan

12. Department of Neuropsychiatry Akita University Graduate School of Medicine Akita Japan

13. Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine Kitasato University Kanagawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimContinued antipsychotic treatment is the key to preventing relapse. Maintenance antipsychotic monotherapy and optimal dose use are recommended for individuals with stable schizophrenia because of their undesirable effects. Decision aids (DAs) are clinical conversation tools that facilitate shared decision‐making (SDM) between patients and health‐care providers. This study aimed to describe the development process and results of acceptability testing of a DA for individuals with stable schizophrenia, considering (i) whether to continue high‐dose antipsychotics or reduce to the standard dose and (ii) whether to continue two antipsychotics or shift to monotherapy.MethodsA DA was developed according to the guidelines for the appropriate use of psychotropic medications and International Patient Decision Aid Standards (IPDAS). First, a DA prototype was developed based on a previous systematic review and meta‐analysis conducted for identifying the effects of continuing or reducing antipsychotic treatment. Second, mixed‐method survey was performed among individuals with schizophrenia and health‐care providers to modify and finalize the DA.ResultsThe DA consisted of an explanation of schizophrenia, options to continue high‐dose antipsychotics or reduce to the standard dose, options to continue two antipsychotics or shift to monotherapy, pros and cons of each option, and a value‐clarification worksheet for each option. The patients (n = 20) reported acceptable language use (75%), adequate information (75%), and well‐balanced presentation (79%). Health‐care providers (n = 20) also provided favorable overall feedback. The final DA covered six IPDAS qualifying criteria.ConclusionA DA was successfully developed for schizophrenia, considering whether to reduce antipsychotics, which can be used in the SDM process.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology,Clinical Psychology

Reference40 articles.

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