4.5 Article

Impact of an educational workshop upon attitudes towards pharmacotherapy for delirium

Journal

INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 938-946

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1041610210000475

Keywords

delirium; treatment; pharmacotherapy; education; games

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Background: There is uncertainty regarding the optimal use of pharmacological strategies in delirium particularly regarding preferred agents, duration of treatment and effectiveness in different populations. Methods: Attitudes towards delirium pharmacotherapy were investigated before and after an educational workshop using the format of a televison game show. Results: Most respondents (65/66) reported psychotropic use with variable frequency (median 60%). Antipsychotic use was inversely related to perception of supporting evidence (p = 0.02). Respondents rated sedative (38%) and antipsychotic (33%) effects as the principal mechanism of action rather than a specific neurochemical anti-delirium effect (21%). Haloperidol was the preferred first-line agent (65%). Suggested continuation treatment after symptom resolution was three days. Eleven respondents had used psychotropics prophylactically. Antipsychotic use was influenced by concerns regarding potential for extrapyramidal (52%), sedative (32%), cerebrovascular (30%) and metabolic (8%) effects. Post-workshop concerns regarding extrapyramidal effects were reduced with a more positive general attitude towards pharmacological interventions, especially in hypoactive presentations (61%) and prophylactically in high-risk patients (56%). Conclusions: Attitudes towards key aspects of delirium pharmacotherapy vary considerably and relate to concerns regarding side effect potential more than perceived mechanism of action. Educational interventions can impact positively upon attitudes.

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