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Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Pharmacol. Dec 9, 2014; 3(4): 174-185
Published online Dec 9, 2014. doi: 10.5497/wjp.v3.i4.174
Table 1 Selected original intervention studies aimed to improve antipsychotic use in the nursing home
Intervention typeStudy designStudy durationHealthcare disciplines providing interventionChanges in antipsychotic use
Audit-feedback
Castle[120]CT1 yrNA4.8% reduction in intervention group; SS
Westbury et al[119]CT26 wkP, Ph, N1.7% reduction in intervention group; SS
Watson-Wolfe et al[122]SSBAS2 moN4.9% reduction
Education
Hagen et al[126]CT1 yrPhIncreases in antipsychotic use; no SS in intervention group but SS in control group
Testad et al[125]CRCT1 yrPIncreases in antipsychotic use; no SS
Monette et al[127]SSBAS7 moP, Psy, Ph, N49% discontinued antipsychotics, 13.6% had dose reduction
Medication review
Patterson et al[129]CRCT1 yrP, Ph, N9.4% reduction in intervention group; odds ratio of antipsychotic use for intervention group vs control = 0.26 (95%CI: 0.14–0.49); SS
Chakraborty et al[131]MSBAS2 yrPsy, N13.4% reduction
Case conferencing
Dahl et al[133]SSBAS1 yrP, Ph, N1.3% reduction
Structured monitoring
Yap et al[104]SSBAS24 wkP, Ph, N4 times increase in antipsychotic prescribing decisions due to side-effects reported; SS
Psychosocial intervention
Fossey et al[134]CRCT10 moPsychologist, occupational therapist, N19.1% reduction in intervention group; lower prevalence in intervention group (19.1% vs 42.1%); SS
Bird et al[135]CT9 moP, Psy, N, Psychologist15.7% reduction in intervention group; SS