Title: Challenges in mental health care
1Challenges in mental health care
2Physical health and severe mental illness time
for action
- Richard Gray RN PhD
- Adjunct Professor of Mental Health Nursing
- NUI Galway, Ireland
- e richard.gray_at_uea.ac.uk
- w http//eastanglia.academia.edu/RichardGray
3Look to your health and if you have it, praise
God, and value it
4Why do research?
5Why do research?
- To enhance patients quality of life, health and
experience of healthcare - IMPACT
- Research without impact is pointless
6(No Transcript)
7How much younger will you die if you have
schizophrenia?
8Life expectancy in patients with SMI
- Life expectancy in the UK at birth
- 81.5 year for girls
- 77.2 years for boys
- Newman and Bland (1991) estimated a 20 reduction
in life expectancy in a cohort of 3,623 in Canada - Systematic review of population based studies (1)
- SMR of 2.50 (95 confidence interval, 2.18-2.43)
- 20-25 years of lost life
- Early 60s for women
- Late 50s for men
SMR in epidemiology is the ratio of observed
deaths to expected deaths. SMR is quoted as a
ratio. 1.0 means the number of observed deaths
equals the number of expected cases. If higher
than 1.0, then there is a higher number of deaths
than is expected
1. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 200764(10)1123-1131
9What is the major cause of death for people with
schizophrenia?
10Suicide
- 4 in 10 attempt suicide
- 1 in 10 will commit suicide
- SMR for Suicide in SMI is (12.86) (1)
- More than 60 of premature deaths are not
directly related to suicide
1. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 200764(10)1123-1131
11What is the major cause of death for people with
schizophrenia?
12Physical health of patients with SMI
- The biggest killer is cardio-vascular disease
(CVD) (1) - Most of the major causes-of death categories were
found to be elevated in people with schizophrenia
(2) - The SMRs for all-cause mortality have increased
during recent decades (2) - Most psychiatric patients have a co-morbid
medical illness (2) - Many illnesses go undiagnosed (2)
- Patient group do not volunteer complaints readily
(2)
1. Robson D. and Gray R. (2006) Int J Nursing
Studies 2. Arch Gen Psychiatry.
200764(10)1123-1131
13Why is life expectancy getting worse?
14Its the nasty drugs we give them
15Mean change in weight with antipsychotics
Estimated Weight Change at 10 Weeks on Standard
Dose
6
5
4
3
Weight Change (Kg)
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
Placebo
Quetiapine
Fluphenazine
Aripiprazole
Clozapine
Ziprasidone
Risperidone
Chlorpromazine
Olanzapine
Haloperidol
Thioridazine
46 week pooled data (Marder et al. Schizophr
Res. 2003161123-36 6-week data adapted from
Jones et al. ACNP 1999. Allison et al. Am J
Psychiatry. 19991561686-1696.
16Medication is good for you
- If you have schizophrenia/bipolar illness (or
depression)
17Neuroprotection with olanzapine vs haloperidol
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19Why is life expectancy getting worse?
- Cardiovascular disease is caused by obesity
- I observe (in practice) that people with SMI are
overweight! - What is the prevalence of obesity in patients
with SMI?
20Body mass index and prevalence of obesity in a
English cohort of patients with severe mental
illness Running header BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia Donna Eldridge (1), Nicky Dawber
(1), Louise Swift (2), Richard Gray (2) 1. Kent
and Medway NHS Social Care Partnership Trust 2.
University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ
21BMI and obesity in SMI
- Prospective
- Conducted in a mental health service in Kent,
England - Serves a population of 1.6 million
- Health checks performed by a mental health nurse
who had had three days physical health training - Demographic information, prescribed medication,
lifestyle factors, weight, height, laboratory
tests - Recruited 497 patients
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
22Average BMI30.0
23Prevalence of obesity in men (n272)
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
24Prevalence of obesity in women (n225)
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
25Why is obesity so prevalent in patients with SMI?
26Its the nasty drugs we give them (again)
27BMI category by psychotropic medication
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
28BMI category by psychotropic medication
Mean bmi no medication25, any medication30,
plt.05
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
29What factors predict obesity?
- Multivariate analysis
- Final model had four factors that explained 17
of the variance - Prescribed antipsychotic medication
- Did not smoke cigarettes
- Poor quality diet
- Where they lived (patients less likely to be
obese if they were homeless or in hospital) - i.e. Patients with the lowest BMI were not taking
medication, smoking cigarettes, homeless, but
eating a healthy diet
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
30What factors predict obesity?
- Multivariate analysis
- Final model had four factors that explained 17
of the variance - Prescribed antipsychotic medication
- Did not smoke cigarettes
- Poor quality diet
- Where they lived (patients less likely to be
obese if the were homeless or in hospital)
Eldridge et al (in prep) BMI and Obesity in
Schizophrenia
31Prevalence of other lifestyle behaviours
- 51 had an unhealthy diet
- High in fat, lt5 portions of fruit and veg a day,
high in calories - 44 took no regular activity
- 58 smoked
- Many motivated to quit
- gt85 reported in other epidemiological studies
- In 2003, 26 of British adults aged 16 smoked
cigarettes, (28 of men and 24 of women)
compared with 45 in 1974. - The majority claimed that they did not drink
alcohol or use illicit drugs - Big issue about the accuracy of reporting
32A quick word about sex
33What are we going to do about?
- Options
- SEP (somebody else's problem - primary care)
- Create a new service
- Enhance the practice of secondary care mental
health workers
34What do mental health nurses think about physical
health?
35What are nurses views about physical health?
- Survey of 600 Nurses in the South London and
Maudsley NHS Trust - 99 thought that promoting good physical health
was part of their role - 84 thought that mental health nurses need to
take responsibility for the physical health care
of clients with serious mental illnesses
Robson D. (in prep) Survey of mental health nurses
36Physical health survey
- 78 feel that their current workload is a barrier
to promoting physical health - Evidence of lack of knowledge and skills
- Want more training on
- Giving nutritional advice (78)
- Helping clients stop smoking (68)
- 74 thought mental health nurses should be more
skilled at managing patients with diabetes - These barriers can be addressed through
- Opportunity cost (or what do you not do)
- Training
- Clinical leadership
Robson D. (in prep) Survey of mental health nurses
37How good are we at monitoring physical wellbeing?
38Metabolic screening is below recommended levels
patients screened
Fewer than 2 in 10 patients are screened for
obesity
Screening of 4 aspects of metabolic syndrome in
the total national sample (n1966)Barnes et al.
Schizophr Bull 2007331397-403.
39Bells and whistles
- The Wellbeing support programme
40Addressing physical health the WellBeing support
programme
41The WellBeing support programme
- Two year programme
- Six formal sessions with a nurse advisor
- Nurse advisors trained by physical health experts
- Performance managed
- Funded by industry
- An add on to routine care
42Wellbeing support
- Step 1 Generating a register of SMI patients and
inviting them to participate in the WSP - Step 2 First face-to-face Well-Being Session
where physical health (blood pressure, pulse,
weight and height) lifestyle factors (diet,
physical activity, smoking status) and
antipsychotic side effects (LUNSERS Day et al
1995) were measured - Step 3 Results of measures taken in session 1
were fed back to patients at a second
face-to-face session. Blood tests (random blood
glucose, thyroid function, liver function, serum
prolactin, lipid screen) were performed during
this meeting - Step 4 Patients were referred by the
practitioner to one or more of the following a
weight management or physical activity group
primary care or specialist doctor for additional
physical health care medication review by
prescribing clinician - Step 5 Two follow-up face-to-face sessions to
evaluate programme and complete follow-up
measures (as in step 1 and 2)
1. Smith S. (2007) International Journal of
Clinical practice
43The WellBeing support programme
- 966 patients enrolled across seven demonstration
sites - 80 completed the programme
- Significant improvements in
- Physical activity
- Smoking
- Diet
- No change in patients BMI
- Maintenance of BMI reported as a positive outcome
- Programme recommended by English DH
Eldridge et al (under review)
44WellBeing in the hands of the NHS
- Industry Wellbeing no longer fits with our
strategy - Nurse advisors withdrawn from practice
- The NHS it works lets change it
- One year (not two year) programme
- Four (not six) formal sessions with mental health
practitioner - Practitioners attend a three day training course
facilitated by a WellBeing nurse advisor - Part of routine care (not an add on service)
- Does it still benefit patients?
Eldridge et al (under review)
45WellBeing in Kent
- Started in 2006
- Evaluation undertaken at the end of 2008
- 212 practitioners had attended training
- 754 patients enrolled on the programme
- Baseline and one year follow-up data on
- Cardiovascular risk factors
- Laboratory tests (glucose, lipids)
- Medication
- Face-to-face interviews with practitioners
Eldridge et al (under review)
46Wellbeing in Kent making a difference
- Making a difference was an emergent theme from
practitioner interviews - it has flagged up a massive deficit within out
clients with some having not had physical
interventions for a number years. A lady I
assessed hadnt had a smear for 20 year! - I have welcomed the programme as it recognises
the need to provide health promotion activity to
a client group where this can be overlooked,
falling between services of secondary and primary
care - I am pleased about running the group and working
with others getting the project off the ground
has been really enjoyable - In fact we are cooking a healthy fry up this
week! (i.e. Grilling not frying, including lots
of veg and fresh fruit) - high blood sugar, hypertension, obesity,
polypharmacy and sexual health problems all of
which I have been able to refer to appropriate
services. - I have discovered a number of serious
conditions including hypertension, raised
cholesterol and recently two inpatients have been
diagnosed with diabetes
Eldridge et al (under review)
47Outcomes of the programme
- Enrolled 754
- Attended 1580 WellBeing sessions
- Mean of 2.1 sessions (half the programme)
- 159 completed the programme
Eldridge et al (under review)
48Effect on the cohort
Eldridge et al (under review)
49In those patients that completed the programme
Eldridge et al (under review)
50Sub-group analysis of Wellbeing completers
N159 ?2126.01 df4 plt0.01
Eldridge et al (under review)
51Adherence, adherence, adherence
52Learning
- Keep it simple
- Set standards that can be performance managed
- Competence of practitioners
53A different model the Health Improvement Profile
(HIP)
54The process of developing the HIP
55The Health Improvement Profile (HIP)
56The Health Improvement Profile (HIP)1
- A RISK ASSESSMENT tool for physical health
- Nurses can be trained to be competent in using
the HIP is three hours - The physical health of all patients can be
profiled - A HIP for every patient once a year
- Enables nudges nurses to plan care/make
appropriate referrals - Guides nurses to evidence based interventions
- Bridges communication between primary and
secondary care
1. White J. et al (2009) Journal of Psychiatric
and Mental Health Nursing
57The HIP process
58(No Transcript)
59HIP case series1
- 31 patients with schizophrenia
- Nurses in routine care trained to use the HIP
- 189 physical health issues
- 6.1 per patient
- Individualised (evidence based) care and
treatment was planned based on individual
profiles - 28 interventions were used
- Providing advice, promoting health behaviour
change, performing an ECG, referral to
professional colleague
60The Health Improvement Profile
- Ongoing research
- Northampton (Shelia Hardy)
- Nurse practitioners using the HIP to review and
jointly plan care for all patients on the Trust
SMI register - Scotland, Edinburgh (Hugh Masters)
- Qualitative study of patients experiences of
physical health care - Scotland, Lanarkshire (Francis Schule)
- HIP 100 case series
61Just finished developing the eHIP
62Impact
- 10 NHS Trusts in the UK are using the HIP/eHIP
63Key points
- Life expectancy is getting worse not better
- We need to turn the tide
- We CAN make a difference
- Keep it simple and stick with it!
- TIME FOR ACTION
64Physical health and severe mental illness time
for action
- Richard Gray RN PhD
- Adjunct Professor of Mental Health Nursing
- NUI Galway, Ireland
- e richard.gray_at_uea.ac.uk
- w http//eastanglia.academia.edu/RichardGray