No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
Guidelines of treatment with antipsychotic medication have changed in the last 10 years, following the marketing of atypical antipsychotic medication (1994), being at the beginning the more frecuently use of typical antipsycotics and classic Depot in opposite to oral and depot atypical antipsychotics at the present.
To describe the real situation about the use of antipsychotics in patients with Schizophrenia following hospitalization into the different Acute Hospitalary Units and differences in their first and subsequent admission.
A survey was conducted by different hospitals in our geography from the discharge reports occurred in 2006 on schizophrenic patients.
2424 discharge reports were analized from 6 Acute Hospitalary Units. They were obtained 601 schizophrenic patients (24.79%) that required rehospitalization in 15.2% (N=76). The average stay was two to three weeks. Most patients were diagnosed of Paranoid Schizophrenia (74;75%). The more frecuently used was oral and/or IM atypical antipsychotic medication at 43%, opposite to 22.30 of the atypicals antipsycotics.
The predominant antipsychotic association used was a typical oral antipsychotic with atypical depot (26.47%), followed by the association of typical antipsychotic with oral atypical antipsychotic in 10.625. In readmissions the differences between both groups faded (atypical antipsychotics, 33.57% and combinations with depot, 30.26%)
There has been an evolution in the pattern of use of antipsychotic medication in the last 10 years. From predominant use of typical antipsychotics we have switched to atypical antipsychotics in monotherapy in first place (50% of patients), followed by the association of atypical antipsychotic plus depot.
Comments
No Comments have been published for this article.