Pharmacopsychiatry 1999; 32(1): 29-37
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-979185
Original Papers

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Psychotropic Drug Prescription in a Psychiatric University Hospital

P. Voirol1 , P.-A. Robert1 , P. Meister, L. Oros, P. Baumann
  • 1Unité de biochimie et psychopharmacologie clinique, Departement universitaire de psychiatrie adulte, Site de Cery, Prilly-Lausanne/Switzerland
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
20 April 2007 (online)

Abstract

A retrospective survey on drug prescription over a one-year period (1989) in 1083 patients (48.3 % of whom were male) hospitalized in a psychiatric university hospital in Switzerland and a 35-day prospective study (1992) on the prescription of "as needed" (prn) medication in a closed and an open ward were carried out. Their aim was to establish a basis for a monitoring of prescription habits and for pharmacoeconomic considerations. In the retrospective study, 48.3 % of the patients were male. The mean duration of hospitalization of the patients was 47.0 ± 68.1 days (mean ± s.d.). Only 11 out of the 1083 patients (1 %) were without psychotropic medication. The mean (+ SD) number of drugs/day the patients were prescribed was 4.6 + 2.8, including 3.2 + 1.7 psychotropic drugs. Patients suffering from schizophrenia (67 d) or from unipolar depression (67.4 d) were hospitalized for the longest periods. Antipsychotics (67.5 % of the patients) were the most frequently prescribed psychotropic drugs, followed by anxiolytics (42.2 %), antidepressants (28.3 %), hypnotics (31.4 %) and mood stabilizers (7.1 %). Antiparkinsonian agents accounted for 4.6 % of all prescriptions. Levomepromazine, haloperidol (30.9 % of all patients) and clotiapine were the most often prescribed neuroleptics, and clozapine was administered to only 6.4 % of all patients. Among the antidepressants, maprotiline (11.9 % of all patients) was more frequently prescribed than the classical tricyclic antidepressant amitriptyline, while the only available SSRI fluvoxamine and MAO inhibitors were rarely used. The most frequently prescribed anxiolytics were clorazepate (28.2 % of all patients), lorazepam, bromazepam, and prazepam. Among the hypnotic drugs, chloral hydrate (11.5 %) was more frequently administered than the first-ranking benzodiazepine flunitrazepam (7.8 %). In the prospective study, 97 % and 77 % of the patients (n = 55) of the closed (n = 29) and of the open ward, respectively, were prescribed "as needed" (prn) drugs. However, only 71 and 80 %, respectively, of these patients finally received the drug. The frequency of prescription was 34.9 % for neuroleptics, 15.1 % for anxiolytic drugs, 8.2 % for non-benzodiazepine hypnotics and only 2.1 % for benzodiazepine hypnotics. The most frequently prescribed neuroleptic drug was clotiapine (18 % of all patients), but finally, only 29 % of the prescribed doses were administered. Studies of this type are biased by the fact that local habits of prescription do not allow generalisation of the findings. Such surveys should be carried out more frequently and simultaneously in different centers. Critical comparisons could help to optimize treatment.

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