Missed opportunities in early psychosis care: retrospective chart review of cardiovascular disease monitoring, disengagement and weight changes in a Ghanaian psychiatric hospital

Background Patients with psychosis face an elevated risk of cardiovascular mortality and are more likely to disengage from care. While antipsychotics are essential for treatment, they further increase this risk. Despite this, Ghana lacks a national policy for monitoring cardiovascular risk factors...

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Main Authors: Joel Agorinya, Emelda Edem Adzo Asem-Ahiablee, Emefa Adzo Dzordzorme, Jude Nazir Ayambila, Elsie Agyeman Amaning, Chukwuebuka Ohakpougwu, Abdulai Rafiq Arhin, Kwadwo Marfo Obeng, Belinda Lennox
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2025-08-01
Series:BJPsych International
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Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2056474025000078/type/journal_article
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Summary:Background Patients with psychosis face an elevated risk of cardiovascular mortality and are more likely to disengage from care. While antipsychotics are essential for treatment, they further increase this risk. Despite this, Ghana lacks a national policy for monitoring cardiovascular risk factors in individuals on antipsychotics. Aims To evaluate disengagement in care and weight changes among newly diagnosed psychotic patients at Accra Psychiatric Hospital, and to inform clinical practice. Method A retrospective review of medical records was conducted for patients newly diagnosed with non-affective psychotic disorders between June 2022 and May 2023. Patients were reviewed for 6 months, with assessments at baseline, 3 months and 6 months. Outcomes included antipsychotic prescription patterns, dropout rates, cardiovascular disease monitoring and weight changes. Descriptive statistics, multinomial logistic regression and linear mixed-effects models were used for analysis. Results The number of patients disengaged from care within the first month was 53.1%, and within 6 months 75.5%; 62.8% received olanzapine at baseline. Weight gain was exponential, with 40% experiencing clinically significant weight gain at 3 months, increasing to 58% at 6 months. Less than 50% of patients had their blood sugar and lipid profiles checked before starting antipsychotics. Higher baseline weight was associated with increased weight over time (β = 0.96, t = 80, P < 0.001, 95% CI 0.93, 0.98). Conclusions High disengagement rates, low cardiovascular disease monitoring and exponential weight gain were observed. Targeted interventions, robust monitoring protocols and further research are needed to improve patient outcomes.
ISSN:2056-4740
2058-6264