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A STOMP-focused evaluation of prescribing practices in one assessment and treatment unit for people with intellectual disabilities.

Authors :
Painter, Jon
Chio, Winola
Black, Liam
Newman, David
Source :
Tizard Learning Disability Review. 2023, Vol. 28 Issue 1/2, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: This study aims to understand whether psychotropic prescribing practices for people with intellectual disabilities are in keeping with best practice guidelines. Design/methodology/approach: This service evaluation project was a retrospective analysis of routinely collected data from the care records of all 36 people with intellectual disability discharged from an intellectual disability assessment and treatment unit during the first five years of the Stop Over medicating People with Intellectual Disabilities and/or autistic people (STOMP) initiative. Data were gathered at four time points (pre-admission, discharge, 6- and 12-month follow-up) before being analysed to understand whether psychotropic prescribing differed among people with different clinical characteristics/traits/diagnoses. Changes over time were also explored to ascertain whether and how prescribing altered from admission to discharge, and over the subsequent year of community living. Findings: Most people with intellectual disabilities left the assessment and treatment unit on fewer regular psychotropic medications and at lower doses than at admission. These optimised regimes were still apparent 12 months post-discharge, suggesting effective discharge planning and community care packages. Inpatients with severe intellectual disabilities generally received more anxiolytics and hypnotics, at higher doses. Autistic people tended to receive more psychotropics in total and at higher cumulative doses, a pattern that persisted post discharge. A third of the sample were admitted on regular anti-psychotic medications despite having no corresponding psychotic diagnosis, a proportion that remained relatively stable through discharge and into the community. Originality/value: This study highlights subsets of the intellectual disability population at particular risk of receiving high doses of psychotropics and a feasible template for providers intending to undertake STOMP-focused evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13595474
Volume :
28
Issue :
1/2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Tizard Learning Disability Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164871930
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/TLDR-04-2022-0008