Race and long-acting antipsychotic prescription at a community mental health center: a retrospective chart review
- PMID: 22579151
- PMCID: PMC3885178
- DOI: 10.4088/JCP.11m07161
Race and long-acting antipsychotic prescription at a community mental health center: a retrospective chart review
Abstract
Objective: There has been concern that racial minorities are disproportionately prescribed long-acting injectable antipsychotic drugs.
Method: Comprehensive administrative data and clinician survey were used to identify all patients with a DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia who received long-acting antipsychotic prescriptions from July 2009 to June 2010 at a community mental health center. Charts were reviewed retrospectively to validate long-acting antipsychotic prescription (eg, medication, dosage) and merged with administrative data from all center patients documenting sociodemographic characteristics (ie, age, race, gender) and comorbid diagnoses. We used bivariate χ2, t tests, and multivariate logistic regression to compare the subsample of patients receiving long-acting injectable drugs (n = 102) to patients not receiving long-acting injectable drugs (n = 799) who were diagnosed with schizophrenia for the same period.
Results: White patients were significantly less likely to receive long-acting antipsychotic prescriptions than minority patients (OR = 0.52, P < .007); ie, nonwhites were 1.89 times more likely to receive such drugs. Age, gender, and comorbid diagnoses, including substance abuse, were unrelated to long-acting injectable prescription, and race/ethnicity was not associated with use of specific agents (haloperidol decanoate, fluphenazine decanoate, or risperidone microspheres) (P = .73).
Conclusions: Racial minorities are more likely than other patients with schizophrenia to receive long-acting injectionable antipsychotics, a finding that suggests their prescribers may consider them less adherent to antipsychotic prescriptions.
© Copyright 2012 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
None of the authors report competing interests. Dr. Aggarwal is supported by a grant from the APA/SAMHSA Minority Fellows Program. This study was not directly supported by the grant, but is mentioned in the interest of full disclosure. There is no personal or professional conflict to declare.
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