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Embracing patient choice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Nev Jones*
Affiliation:
DePaul University, Chicago, Illinois, USA. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2012 

As a researcher, doctoral student and service user (with a diagnosis of schizophrenia), I commend Morrison and colleagues Reference Morrison, Hutton, Shiers and Turkington1 for their brave and timely editorial. In addition to the adverse effects they mention, a small but robust literature attests to the often overlooked impact of subjective or psychological side-effects on service users’ quality of life and ability to pursue meaningful, socially valued roles (e.g. Awad & Voruganti, Reference Awad and Voruganti2 Deegan, Reference Deegan3 Jones, Reference Jones4 Roe & Swarbrick Reference Roe and Swarbrick5 ).

In a focus group project on medications and treatment engagement that I recently completed, many service users reported that, in their experience, treating psychiatrists almost always refuse to even see patients who decline pharmacotherapy. Likewise, help with coming off medications is rarely available from medical professionals, leading to the deeply ironic fact that virtually the only comprehensive guide to psychotropic medication discontinuation widely available in the USA is the non-academic, activist-published Harm Reduction Guide to Coming Off Psychiatric Drugs. Reference Hall6 Similarly, I have yet to meet an American service user with a diagnosis of psychosis who has ever been actively offered targeted intermittent (v. continuous) treatment. Clearly, research documenting the representative ‘real-world’ availability of treatment choices and alternatives, as well as the actual extent of autonomy support in psychiatric settings (or the lack thereof), is urgently needed.

As things stand, ‘choice’ and ‘self-determination’, at least in the USA, often appear to involve little more than the choice between a variety of antipsychotics and other psychotropic medications. As Morrison et al suggest, it is high time we began to take the profound heterogeneity of treatment response, outcome and symptom trajectories, as well as individual needs, preferences and risk assessments, seriously.

References

1 Morrison, AP, Hutton, P, Shiers, D, Turkington, D. Antipsychotics: is it time to introduce patient choice? Br J Psychiatry 2012; 201: 83–4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2 Awad, AG, Voruganti, LP. Neuroleptic dysphoria: revisiting the concept 50 years later. Acta Psychiatr Scand 2005; 111: 613.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Deegan, PE. The importance of personal medicine: a qualitative study of resilience in people with psychiatric disabilities. Scand J Public Health 2005; 66: 2935.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4 Jones, N. Antipsychotic medications, psychological side effects and treatment engagement. Issues Ment Health Nurs 2012; 33: 492–3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5 Roe, D, Swarbrick, M. Recovery-oriented approach to psychiatric medication: guidelines for practitioners. J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv 2007; 45: 3540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Hall, W. Harm Reduction Guide to Coming off Psychiatric Drugs. The Icarus Project and Freedom Center, 2012.Google Scholar
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