Prescribing pattern of psychotropic medications in child psychiatric practice in a mental referral hospital in Botswana

2017 
INTRODUCTION: there is a growing preference for psycho-pharmacologicaltherapy over non-pharmacological care. The prescription pattern and the choice of psychotropic medications vary in different settings. Whilst newer agents and rational prescribing are favored in the more specialized settings, the pattern remains unclear in less specialized units, largely due to lack of data. The aims were to conduct a treatment audit in the only mental referral hospital in Botswana, which is a non-specialized child and adolescent care setting and see how it conforms to best practice. METHODS: a retrospective audit which involved the extraction of socio-demographic and clinical information from the records of patients who were ? 17 years and seen from January 1, 2012-July 31, 2016. RESULTS: a total of 238 files were used for this report. Mean age (SD) was 12.41 (4.1) years. Of the 120 (50.4%) patients who had pharmacological intervention, only 82(68.6%) had monotherapy. The most commonly prescribed psychotropic was antipsychotic (40%). Off-label use of antipsychotics and polypharmacy were 31.2% and 29.2% respectively. CONCLUSION: the level of conformity to standard practice in terms of psychotropic prescribing in our setting is consistent with the reports from developed countries where more specialized care ostensibly exists. Further studies will be necessary to determinethe scope of psychotropic use.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []