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Psychotropic drug prescribing before and during the COVID-19 pandemic among people with depressive and anxiety disorders: a multinational network study

Authors
Luo, H | Chai, Y | Li, S | Lau, WCY | Torre, CO | Hayes, J | Lam, ICH | Lin, X | Yin, C | Fortin, S | Kern, DM | Lee, DY | Park, RW  | Jang, JW | Chui, CSL | Li, J | Seager, S | Man, KKC | Wong, ICK
Citation
The lancet. Psychiatry, 11(10). : 807-817, 2024
Journal Title
The lancet. Psychiatry
ISSN
2215-03662215-0374
Abstract
Background: People with mental health conditions were potentially more vulnerable than others to the neuropsychiatric effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the global efforts taken to contain it. The aim of this multinational study was to examine the changes in psychotropic drug prescribing during the pandemic among people with depressive and anxiety disorders. Methods: This study included electronic medical records and claims data from nine databases in six countries (France, Germany, Italy, the UK, South Korea, and the USA) of patients with a diagnosis of depressive or anxiety disorders between 2016 and 2021. The outcomes were monthly prevalence rates of antidepressant, antipsychotic, and anxiolytic drug prescribing. The associations between the pandemic and psychotropic drug prescribing were examined with interrupted time series analyses for the total sample and stratified by sex and age group. People with lived experience were not involved in the research and writing process. Findings: Between Jan 1, 2016 and Dec 31, 2020, an average of 16 567 914 patients with depressive disorders (10 820 956 females [65·31%] and 5 746 958 males [34·69%]) and 15 988 451 patients with anxiety disorders (10 688 788 females [66·85%] and 5 299 663 males [33·15%]) were identified annually. Most patients with depressive disorders and anxiety disorders were aged 45–64 years. Ethnicity data were not available. Two distinct trends in prescribing rates were identified. The first pattern shows an initial surge at the start of the pandemic (eg, antipsychotics among patients with depressive disorders in MDCD_US (rate ratio [RR] 1·077, 95% CI 1·055–1·100), followed by a gradual decline towards the counterfactual level (RR 0·990, 95% CI 0·988–0·992). The second pattern, observed in four databases for anxiolytics among patients with depressive disorders and two for antipsychotics among patients with anxiety disorders, shows an immediate increase (eg, antipsychotics among patients with anxiety disorders in IQVIA_UK: RR 1·467, 95% CI 1·282–1·675) without a subsequent change in slope (RR 0·985, 95% CI 0·969–1·003). In MDCD_US and IQVIA_US, the anxiolytic prescribing rate continued to increase among patients younger than 25 years for both disorders. Interpretation: The study reveals persistently elevated rates of psychotropic drug prescriptions beyond the initial phase of the pandemic. These findings underscore the importance of enhanced mental health support and emphasise the need for regular review of psychotropic drug use among this patient group in the post-pandemic era. Funding: University Grants Committee, Research Grants Council, The Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.
MeSH

DOI
10.1016/S2215-0366(24)00245-1
PMID
39241791
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Biomedical Informatics
Ajou Authors
박, 래웅
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