Abstract

Introduction

Clozapine, the first atypical antipsychotic, is a highly effective medication for patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia. Robust evidence describes important risk for psychosis in immigrant population(2). Despite this, some studies suggest that immigrant patients are less treated and misdiagnosed due to cultural barriers(3,4). Clozapine and Electroconvulsive therapy tend to be less prescribed in immigrants(3). However, few studies assess differences in clozapine prescription between immigrants and non-immigrant psychotic inpatients.

Objectives

To describe and compare clozapine prescription between psychotic patients and non-psychotic patients in a sample of Acute and Chronic inpatients.

Methods

Patients who have presented, according to DSM-V criteria, one or more non-affective psychotic episodes, were recruited in Acute and Chronic inpatients units leading to a total sample of 198 patients. Immigrant condition was defined as “a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country”. Demographic characteristics of patients, clinical data and main pharmacological treatment were recorded through a questionnaire. Comparative analysis was performed with IBM SPSS Statistics using Chi-Square Test and t-Studenttest.

Results

From a total of 198patients clozapine was prescribed to 31(15,7%). From the total immigrant sample only 7,1% had prescribed clozapine compared to 24,2% from the locals(p<0.005). Significant differences in diagnosis associated to clozapine were found between both groups : Schizophrenia(57,1%immigrants, 57,1%locals), Schizoaffective disorder(14,3%immigrants, 41,7%locals) and Non specific psychosis (28,3%immigrants, 8,3%locals).

Conclusions

According to our results, immigrant psychotic inpatients receive less clozapine prescription compared to non-immigrant psychotic patients. There results should be considered to study barriers for clozapine prescription in this population and offer a treatment based in equality.

Disclosure

No significant relationships.

Details

Title
¿Do we prescribe less clozapine to immigrant psychotic patients compared to non-immigrant psychotic patients?
Author
Trabsa, A 1 ; Mané, A 2 ; A Llimona González 3 ; Vargas, L 3 ; Muro, C 4 ; Moreno, A 2 ; Amann, B 2 ; Pérez-Solà, V 2 

 Hospital del Mar (Consorci Mar Parc de Salut de Barcelona), Psychiatry, Barcelona, Spain; Parc de Salut Mar, Institut De Neuropsiquiatria I Addiccions, Barcelona, Spain 
 Parc de Salut Mar, Institut De Neuropsiquiatria I Addiccions, Barcelona, Spain 
 Hospital del Mar, Psychiatry, Barcelona, Spain 
 Hospital del Mar (Consorci Mar Parc de Salut de Barcelona), Psychiatry, Barcelona, Spain 
Pages
S217-S218
Publication year
2022
Publication date
Jun 2022
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISSN
09249338
e-ISSN
17783585
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2708705062
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the European Psychiatric Association. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.