Trends Over Time in Antipsychotic Initiation at a Large Children's Health Care System

Laura J Chavez, Kelly J Kelleher, Arne Beck, Gregory N Clarke, Robert B Penfold, Laura J Chavez, Kelly J Kelleher, Arne Beck, Gregory N Clarke, Robert B Penfold

Abstract

Objectives: Antipsychotic prescribing in children and adolescents increased sharply beginning in the 1990s, but recent reports among Medicaid enrollees suggest declining trends. However, few studies have included both commercially and publicly insured patients or focused on trends in new antipsychotic medications in children without documented psychotic disorders or other indicated conditions. The objective of the study was to report trends in new antipsychotic prescribing for pediatric patients (age 3-17 years) in a large children's health care system. Methods: Data were abstracted from electronic medical records (January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2017). New antipsychotic medication orders were defined as antipsychotic orders for patients without an order in the 180 days prior. Patients were excluded if the order was initiated in an emergency department or inpatient setting; they were diagnosed with psychotic disorder, mania, autism spectrum disorder, or intellectual disability; or the order was for prochlorperazine. The crude rate of new antipsychotic prescribing is reported quarterly with Poisson 95% confidence intervals in the total sample and by demographic subgroups (child vs. adolescent, female vs. male, public vs. private insurance, and white vs. nonwhite). Results: Antipsychotic orders decreased from 54.9 prescriptions per 10,000 person months in the first quarter of 2013 to 34.1 per 10,000 person months in the last quarter of 2017. Rates of antipsychotic prescribing were significantly higher for adolescents compared with children, patients who were commercially insured compared with Medicaid insured, and at most time points for white compared with non-white patients. However, prescribing rates did not differ significantly based on gender. Conclusions: Antipsychotic prescribing declined for both commercially and Medicaid-insured children in a pediatric hospital-based system, although white and commercially insured patients were more likely to be prescribed antipsychotics. More attention may be needed for reducing potentially avoidable prescribing of antipsychotics in previously understudied subgroups, such as commercially insured patients. Clinical Trial Registration Number: NCT03448575.

Keywords: antipsychotics; quality of care; trends.

Conflict of interest statement

The sponsor (NIMH) provided guidance on the study design but was not involved in data collection, analysis, and interpretation of results, or writing of the report. All authors contributed to the design of the analysis and participated in drafting of the article. There have been no prior presentations of the study findings in any form (poster or abstract).

Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Overall trend over time in rate of antipsychotic medication ordering.
FIG. 2.
FIG. 2.
Differences in rates of antipsychotic medication ordering by patient characteristics.

Source: PubMed

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