Key survey findings include:
-- While many psychiatrists report asking or discussing general health
issues with their patients, 83% of psychiatrists cited lack of time
during patient visits as the main obstacle to providing overall care;
74% feel they are not as well equipped to address the patient's
overall health as are primary care physicians.
-- 82% of consumer respondents feel that treatment of their overall
health -- not just their mental illness -- is important to their
recovery. Yet nearly half expect their psychiatrist to focus
exclusively on their mental health (48%), rather than overall and
mental health.
Medication Side Effects
The survey also points to significant concerns about medication side
effects. Experts suggest that some commonly-used mental health medications,
namely second generation atypical anti-psychotics, which are associated
with weight gain and other side effects, may be putting people with
schizophrenia at much greater risk for obesity and diabetes. The survey
found that:
-- 69% of people with schizophrenia reported that they have discontinued
use of medication due to side effects that negatively impacted their
quality of life. Almost 40% of consumers reported that the longest
they had continuously remained on one medication was less than a
year.
-- When choosing from a list of side effects considered when prescribing
antipsychotic medication, diabetes was most often cited by
prescribers, with 94% of psychiatrists considering it "extremely" or
"quite" important.
"When people with schizophrenia stop their medications, their mental
health is jeopardized and they are not able to take the best care of
themselves," said Joseph Parks, M.D., president of the Medical Director's
Council of the National As
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