1 / 33

UCI-RCOC NEURODEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM AND CLINIC A 14 Year Review February 2, 2012

UCI-RCOC NEURODEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM AND CLINIC A 14 Year Review February 2, 2012. UCI Professional Personnel. Ira T. Lott, MD - Pediatric Neurologist and Director Paul Touchette, EdD – Psychologist Gail Fernandez, MD – Psychiatrist Anne Tournay, MD – Neurologist

raymondjohn
Download Presentation

UCI-RCOC NEURODEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM AND CLINIC A 14 Year Review February 2, 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UCI-RCOC NEURODEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAM AND CLINIC A 14 Year Review February 2, 2012

  2. UCI Professional Personnel Ira T. Lott, MD - Pediatric Neurologist and Director Paul Touchette, EdD – Psychologist Gail Fernandez, MD – Psychiatrist Anne Tournay, MD – Neurologist Larry Plon, Pharm D. - Research Pharmacist Christy Hom, PhD - Neuropsychologist and Coordinator

  3. Objectives 1) To determine the extent of polypharmacy for psychoactive drugs in the RCOC consumer population 2) Interdisciplinary Team Clinic for RCOC consumers with medication and behavioral issues

  4. Psychoactive Drug Survey • 30 months consecutive data • CalOptima Pharmacy Billing Records Accessed • Cross-linked to RCOC consumers

  5. 30 month Medication Survey • 7,419 psychoactive drug prescriptions for RCOC population ( 26.8% of all prescriptions written) • 62% had more than one psychoactive drug prescription and 32% had 3 or more • First study of its kind in the DD population, published J Intellect Disability Research

  6. 30 Month Survey of Psychoactive Medications • 2,229,970 prescriptions surveyed • 92,162 patients • 25% were for psychoactive drugs • Is it possible to determine medication adherence from the pharmacy billing records?

  7. Calculation of Medication Adherence • Ratio = # of days of drug supply # of days from first to last refill • Adherence “yes” if ratio is ≥0.75 to 1.1 • Adherence “no” if ratio<0.75

  8. Adherence by Residence Type • Cross linked adherence calculations with residence type from CDER

  9. Number of Clients by Residence Total = 1865 RCOC Consumers

  10. Psychoactive vs. Other Drug Types

  11. Clients in Own Home Significantly Less Adherent for All 5 Medication Classes

  12. Factors Affecting Medication Adherence • Residence Group home residents are twice as likely to adhere to their psychoactive prescriptions than consumers who live in their own home or family home • Medication form DivalproexER is 2.01 times more likely to be adhered to than regular Divalproex • Polypharmacy, gender, and age did not affect adherence.

  13. Conclusions from Adherence Study • Medication adherence is problematic for clients living in their own home • This is very similar to the general population • Public health efforts towards medication adherence indicated

  14. Interdisciplinary Clinic

  15. Introduction to Interdisciplinary Clinic • Team consists of neurologist, psychiatrist, educational, research and neuropsychologists • All clients referred by RCOC (1837 consumers evaluated since 1998) • Interdisciplinary team review of diagnostic, medication, and treatment options for each client

  16. Primary Referral Reasons • Polypharmacy • Medication side effects • Increasing behavioral problems • Need for diagnostic services

  17. Mean Age of 1500 Consumers Mean ages of consumers in years 2007-2011 less than in years 2001-2006; p<.001

  18. Age Distribution of Clinic Population

  19. Gender Distribution Distribution from 2001-2004 significantly different than that from 2007-2011 Distribution in 2005 significantly different than that in 2006, but not from that in 2004 Distribution from 2010-2011 significantly different from 2007

  20. Level of Intellectual Disability

  21. Distribution of Intellectual Disability *Prior to 2008, consumers with No Intellectual Disability had their ID Level coded as missing % of Consumers with ID, Severity Unspecified has sharply increased since 2008

  22. Number of Psychoactive Medications Pre-Clinic

  23. Average # of Psychoactive Medications Pre-Clinic Average # of medications from 2001-2007 greater than average # of medications from 2008-2011; p<.001

  24. Top 25 Medications Pre-Clinic

  25. Major Psychiatric Diagnostic Categories

  26. Diagnostic Trends by Year Significant increase in consumers with an Anxiety Disorder or Autistic Disorder

  27. Diagnostic Trends by Year Significant decrease in consumers with Bipolar Disorder, OCD, or Impulse Control Disorder

  28. Differences between Disorders

  29. Associations with # of Psychoactive Medications • Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and Impulse Control Disorder associated with more medications • Autistic Disorder associated with fewer medications (possibly because younger in age)

  30. Associations with Schizophrenia • Significantly older than patients not diagnosed with Schizophrenia • Significantly higher intellectual functioning • Taking significantly more psychoactive medications than those without Schizophrenia • Significantly better personal, community, and social skills than rest of clinic population

  31. Associations with Bipolar Disorder • Taking significantly more psychoactive medications than those without Bipolar Disorder • Caregivers less compliant in following clinic recommendations • Significantly more irritable than consumers without Bipolar Disorder • Significantly better personal, community, and social skills than rest of clinic population

  32. Associations with Autistic Disorder • Significantly younger than consumers without Autism • Taking fewer psychoactive medications • Significantly less personal, community, and social skills • Significantly more maladaptive behaviors (both internalizing and externalizing behaviors)

More Related