Antipsychotic-induced weight gain: exploring the role of psychiatrists in managing patients' physical health - challenges, current options and direction for future care.

IF 2.2 Q3 PSYCHIATRY BJPsych Bulletin Pub Date : 2024-02-01 DOI:10.1192/bjb.2023.29
Kenn Lee, Adeola Akinola, Seri Abraham
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Abstract

Antipsychotics and severe mental illness (SMI) are associated with weight gain, and obesity increases the risks of cardiometabolic disease and premature death. These present management and liability issues for psychiatrists. Physical healthcare for people with SMI is poor, and this may partly be owing to training limitations and lack of proactiveness by psychiatrists. Ethically and legally, psychiatrists have a duty to avoid unnecessary harm and to maintain an acceptable standard of care. This would apply particularly to patients receiving compulsory treatment for their SMI owing to their vulnerability. Discrepancy between psychiatric and non-psychiatric approaches to pharmacological treatment creates ambiguity, and weight gain could demotivate antipsychotic adherence. This article explores how the Mental Health Act could be used to address these issues, and the ethical considerations, and proposes how long-acting glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists could be introduced into existing psychiatric practice as a treatment option for antipsychotic-induced weight gain and obesity in SMI.

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抗精神病药物引起的体重增加:探讨精神科医生在管理患者身体健康方面的作用--挑战、当前选择和未来护理方向。
抗精神病药物和严重精神疾病(SMI)与体重增加有关,而肥胖会增加心血管代谢疾病和过早死亡的风险。这些都给精神科医生带来了管理和责任问题。SMI 患者的身体保健服务很差,部分原因可能是由于精神科医生的培训限制和缺乏主动性。在道德和法律上,精神科医生有责任避免不必要的伤害,并保持可接受的医疗标准。这一点尤其适用于因 SMI 而接受强制治疗的病人,因为他们很脆弱。精神科和非精神科在药物治疗方法上的不一致会产生歧义,体重增加可能会降低患者坚持服用抗精神病药物的积极性。本文探讨了如何利用《精神健康法》来解决这些问题,以及伦理方面的考虑,并提出了如何将长效胰高血糖素样肽-1受体激动剂引入现有的精神病治疗实践,作为抗精神病药物诱发的 SMI 体重增加和肥胖症的治疗方案。
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来源期刊
BJPsych Bulletin
BJPsych Bulletin PSYCHIATRY-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
79
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: BJPsych Bulletin prioritises research, opinion and informed reflection on the state of psychiatry, management of psychiatric services, and education and training in psychiatry. It provides essential reading and practical value to psychiatrists and anyone involved in the management and provision of mental healthcare.
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