Disparities in antipsychotic medication use

Objectives: To examine ethnic and income-related disparities in the use of antipsychotic medication by conducting a systematic review of the related literature and a secondary data analysis. Methods: The review was conducted using a protocol developed to systematically search, select and review peer...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Puyat, Joseph Hernandez
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35977
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-35977
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-359772018-01-05T17:25:06Z Disparities in antipsychotic medication use Puyat, Joseph Hernandez Objectives: To examine ethnic and income-related disparities in the use of antipsychotic medication by conducting a systematic review of the related literature and a secondary data analysis. Methods: The review was conducted using a protocol developed to systematically search, select and review peer-reviewed articles on ethnic disparities in antipsychotic use. Study selection and data abstraction were performed by two independent reviewers. The secondary data analysis was conducted to examine income-related disparities in antipsychotic use in three cohorts. The first cohort was comprised of 19 to 64-year olds who had a recorded schizophrenia diagnosis. Income-related differences in the essential use of antipsychotics were assessed in this cohort. The second cohort was comprised of seniors (65 years and older) who had a recorded dementia but not schizophrenia or bipolar disorder diagnosis. The third cohort was of children and youth (18 years and younger) who had no recorded schizophrenia or bipolar disorder diagnosis. Income-related differences in the potentially inappropriate use of antipsychotics were studied in these last two cohorts. Disparities in antipsychotic use were assessed using logistic regression, adjusting for factors that influence medicine use (i.e., age, sex, health status, relevant diagnoses and residence in urban areas). Results: The systematic review found no consistent evidence of ethnic disparities in the receipt of antipsychotic treatment. However, among those who were treated, ethnic minorities were found to be consistently less likely than non minorities to receive the newer type of antipsychotics. Results of the secondary data analyses indicate that the odds of essential antipsychotic use were lower in low-income individuals than those with higher incomes. Odds of exposure to potentially inappropriate antipsychotic use, on the other hand, were higher among low-income individuals and seniors in long-term care. Conclusion: There is evidence of persistent disparities in the use of antipsychotic medication. Periodic examination and studies that identify causal factors and effective interventions are needed to reduce disparities. Medicine, Faculty of Population and Public Health (SPPH), School of Graduate 2011-07-13T17:08:17Z 2012-07-31 2011 2011-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35977 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Objectives: To examine ethnic and income-related disparities in the use of antipsychotic medication by conducting a systematic review of the related literature and a secondary data analysis. Methods: The review was conducted using a protocol developed to systematically search, select and review peer-reviewed articles on ethnic disparities in antipsychotic use. Study selection and data abstraction were performed by two independent reviewers. The secondary data analysis was conducted to examine income-related disparities in antipsychotic use in three cohorts. The first cohort was comprised of 19 to 64-year olds who had a recorded schizophrenia diagnosis. Income-related differences in the essential use of antipsychotics were assessed in this cohort. The second cohort was comprised of seniors (65 years and older) who had a recorded dementia but not schizophrenia or bipolar disorder diagnosis. The third cohort was of children and youth (18 years and younger) who had no recorded schizophrenia or bipolar disorder diagnosis. Income-related differences in the potentially inappropriate use of antipsychotics were studied in these last two cohorts. Disparities in antipsychotic use were assessed using logistic regression, adjusting for factors that influence medicine use (i.e., age, sex, health status, relevant diagnoses and residence in urban areas). Results: The systematic review found no consistent evidence of ethnic disparities in the receipt of antipsychotic treatment. However, among those who were treated, ethnic minorities were found to be consistently less likely than non minorities to receive the newer type of antipsychotics. Results of the secondary data analyses indicate that the odds of essential antipsychotic use were lower in low-income individuals than those with higher incomes. Odds of exposure to potentially inappropriate antipsychotic use, on the other hand, were higher among low-income individuals and seniors in long-term care. Conclusion: There is evidence of persistent disparities in the use of antipsychotic medication. Periodic examination and studies that identify causal factors and effective interventions are needed to reduce disparities. === Medicine, Faculty of === Population and Public Health (SPPH), School of === Graduate
author Puyat, Joseph Hernandez
spellingShingle Puyat, Joseph Hernandez
Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
author_facet Puyat, Joseph Hernandez
author_sort Puyat, Joseph Hernandez
title Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
title_short Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
title_full Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
title_fullStr Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
title_full_unstemmed Disparities in antipsychotic medication use
title_sort disparities in antipsychotic medication use
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35977
work_keys_str_mv AT puyatjosephhernandez disparitiesinantipsychoticmedicationuse
_version_ 1718582919192117248