1. Prevalence of polypharmacy and factors impacting psychotropic prescribing patterns in women of childbearing potential at inpatient mental health services in Qatar
- Author
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Nervana Elbakary, Oraib Abdallah, Sami Ouanes, Ahmad Hasanoglu, Eiman Abedlfattah‐Arafa, Maha Al‐Shaikhly, Shatha Alqam, Sulaiman Alshakhs, Zainab Hijawi, Majid Al‐Abdulla, Noriya Al‐Khuzaei, and Sazgar Hamad
- Subjects
antipsychotics ,chlorpromazine ,hospital stay ,suicidal history ,treatment response ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Aims Women may experience unique mental disorders due to hormone shifts. Rates of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are similar between genders, but onset and symptoms may differ. Women tend to use more psychotropic drugs due to limited therapeutic options. This study was aimed to estimate the prevalence of psychotropic polypharmacy among females of childbearing potential and factors impacting prescribing patterns. Methods This was a quantitative retrospective chart review for patients admitted to inpatient units at the Mental Health Hospital in Qatar. SPSS® Statistics was used for data analysis. In addition to descriptive statistics applied, linear regression and binary logistic regression models were used to examine the clinical and sociodemographic factors associated with polypharmacy and full therapeutic response upon discharge, respectively. An alpha value of 0.05 was used. Results Of the 347 patients, 52.7% of the patients received a prescription of at least two psychotropic drugs upon discharge. Around two‐thirds (63.1%) were prescribed at least one antipsychotic. Potential predictors of polypharmacy were age (p = 0.027), longer hospital stay (p = 0.003), family history (p
- Published
- 2024
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