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The appropriate monitoring of patients on lithium therapy has been the subject of extensive research in the form of clinical audits and surveys culminating in the development of specific guidelines to help clinicians provide optimal care for patients on lithium. The concept of ‘shared care’ has also gained attention in the literature with various types of shared care interventions being introduced as potential ways of improving communication between primary and secondary care.
Objectives
This article aims to (1) review the literature evaluating lithium monitoring practices in the United Kingdom and Ireland in the last 25 years and (2) determine whether locally agreed shared care agreements have the potential to improve monitoring quality.
Methods
A literature search was conducted using the following databases: PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Academic Search Premier, CINAHL and PsychInfo. A total of 12 studies were selected for review including 11 audits/prospective chart reviews and one qualitative study using semi-structured interviews.
Conclusions
Overall, the quality of lithium monitoring seems to be improving throughout the years. However, none of the studies reviewed revealed complete adherence to monitoring guidelines. This may be due to a lack of effective communication between primary and secondary care. Several shared care interventions have been described in the literature but there is a paucity of studies concerned with the effects of local shared care arrangements designed for the specific purpose of lithium monitoring. Nonetheless, the extant data suggests that such agreements may help improve monitoring standards by allowing the responsibilities for managing the prescribing and monitoring of lithium to be more clearly defined and shared between primary and secondary care.
This chapter highlights studies on excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) and depression within the framework of human sleep and chronobiology. It provides an outlook of chronobiological underpinnings of this relationship in order to provide insights and candidates for chronobiological management. Sleepiness may reflect the waning of processes maintaining wakefulness and/or may result from distinct neural systems acting to promote sleep. Recent imaging studies have shed new light on the neurobiological basis of depression. Clinical rating scales measuring depression often inquire about fatigue and tiredness. On a pharmacological domain, there is emerging evidence that the circadian system is implicated in some of the treatment mechanisms, such as lithium therapy for bipolar depression. Insights on the link among EDS, depression and chronobiology can provide a better comprehension of this sleep-wake disturbance, together with promising therapeutic managements.
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