|
|
|||||||||||
Mental Health Services for Older People, Health Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand
|
|
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The clinical practice of electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) by New Zealand psychiatrists was surveyed by questionnaire. This paper compares the findings with national and regional surveys conducted in Great Britain, and considers the influence on clinical practice in New Zealand of the Royal College of Psychiatrists' ECT Handbook.
RESULTS
ECT has the same level of support from psychiatrists in New Zealand as in Britain, but is less frequently used. Modern brief pulse machines are used by 16 of 19 (84%) services from which data were received. The ECT Handbook was the most nominated source of information on ECT. Most (87%) respondents were aware of at least one set of ECT guidelines. However, these have apparently failed to influence some important aspects of practice. In particular, many medical conditions are still perceived as absolute contraindications.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
The Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists need to place even greater emphasis on the importance of training in ECT for both trainees and qualified psychiatrists, and on the promotion of approved guidelines.
|
|
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
The Study |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Questions addressed current attitudes to, range of experience of and practice of ECT. Of the 307 questionnaires distributed 184 were returned, giving a response rate of 60%. In one question respondents were asked to rate (often, sometimes, rarely or never) how appropriate they considered ECT to be for a number of psychiatric conditions. The analysis used the same method as both Pippard & Ellam and Benbow et al.
The responses were treated as if they were an arithmetic series, assigning +2 to often, +1 to sometimes, -1 to rarely and -2 to never. A value of 0 was given to any ambiguous or undecided responses. The deviation from 0 was calculated for each condition. A deviation of +2.0 would indicate that all respondents had chosen often and a value of -2.0 would indicate all had chosen never (see Table 1).
|
|
|
Findings |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Principal specialities were as follows: general psychiatry (111), child and adolescent psychiatry (20), psychiatry of the elderly (19), forensic psychiatry (18), consultation liaison psychiatry (6), and drug and alcohol dependency, psychotherapy, maternal mental health, rehabilitation, community crisis and intellectual disability (12). Eighty respondents trained primarily in New Zealand, 53 primarily in the UK, 19 in the USA, 15 in South Africa, 6 in Australia and 7 in Canada, India, Sweden or Ireland. Professional affiliations were as follows: Fellow of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (FRANZCP; 99), Fellow/Member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists (F/MRCPsych; 58), United States Board Eligible/Certified (17), South African qualification (9), other (4) or none (17). Twenty had joint affiliation.
ECT guidelines
Eighty-seven per cent of respondents were aware of guidelines to ECT
practice and many cited more than one source, these being: Royal College of
Psychiatrists (86), Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists
(51), American Psychiatric Association (21), local guidelines/protocols (24)
and Canadian Psychiatric Association (Enns
& Reiss, 1992) (2).
Attitude to, and prescription of, ECT
Ninety (49%) respondents were strong advocates of ECT, 82 (45%) were
generally in favour, 10 (5%) were generally opposed but would use it as a last
resort and one respondent said ECT should never be used. No respondent
declined an opinion. One hundred and ten (60%) had prescribed ECT in their
current post. One hundred and fourteen (62%) could identify a consultant
responsible for their ECT service and 63 (34%) could not. Fourteen respondents
always administered the ECT they prescribed, 78 sometimes and 80 never.
Seventy per cent would give ECT to an unwilling patient.
Routine investigations and information provided before ECT
Routine investigations before ECT were reported as follows: physical
examination (100%), urea and electrolytes (92%), haemoglobin (91%),
electrocardiograph (77%), chest X-ray (62%), syphilis serology (18%), computed
tomography brain scan (10%) and skull X-ray (8%). Ninety per cent routinely
gave written information on ECT to the patient and 66% to the family of the
patient. Others nominated to receive written information included caregivers,
judges, retirement home staff, support workers, ward and community mental
health staff, guardians and close friends.
ECT technique and practice
Sixty-five per cent of respondents reported having a brief pulse machine,
2% a sine wave machine and 33% did not know. Fifty per cent would initially
use bilateral ECT, 13% right unilateral, 20% unilateral depending on
handedness and 17% expressed no preference. Twice weekly treatment was
preferred by 50%, thrice weekly by 45% and 5% favoured other regimes.
Eighty-eight per cent consider maintenance ECT favourably and 50% had used it.
There were several comments about how rarely this had occurred.
Contraindications, morbidity and mortality
Respondents rated 17 medical conditions as absolute or relative
contraindications, or as irrelevant (see
Table 2). Three deaths
attributed to ECT were reported in the combined experience of the 184
respondents. They were a ruptured cardiac aneurysm, extension of a
cerebrovascular accident and presumed ventricular fibrillation during
treatment where a defibrillator was not available. Seventeen per cent of
respondents had experience of what they considered a major medical
complication occurring during ECT. Seven respondents had personal experience
of a defibrillator being used. Twenty-three per cent reported difficulty at
some time getting an anaesthetic for medically ill people.
|
Medications
The majority of respondents would always or preferably reduce or stop
benzodiazepines (81%), anti-convulsants (75%) and monoamine oxidase inhibitors
(MAOIs) (69%) and half would stop lithium (50%). Fewer would stop tricyclics
(44%), neuroleptics (41%) and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
(41%). Eighty per cent routinely used antidepressants as prophylaxis after
ECT.
|
|
Comment |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Table 1 compares the appropriateness rating for the use of ECT in four populations; a 1980 national survey in the UK (Pippard & Ellam, 1981), old age psychiatrists in the UK in 1991 (Benbow, 1991), north-west England psychiatrists in 1995 (Benbow et al, 1998) and New Zealand psychiatrists in 1999. Most ratings were similar, although the generally less negative ratings in 1980 suggest that ECT was used then for a wider range of disorders. The positive score for depression with dementia in both of Benbow et al's surveys is matched by a score of +0.2 for the 19 New Zealand old age psychiatrists. For acute confusional states the score of -1.5 was the same as that of Pippard and Ellam, and higher than the -1.9 and -1.8 of Benbow. ECT is not indicated for general cases of delirium, but repeated reports of its effectiveness have led the American Psychiatric Association Task Force on ECT (1990) to acknowledge delirium as an indication. Higher scoring may represent greater recognition that ECT can be effective in neuroleptic malignant syndrome (Velamoor et al, 1995).
A detailed medical history and full physical examination was the generally acknowledged minimum pre-ECT evaluation. The Royal College of Psychiatrists' guidelines (1995) include a full blood count and urinalysis for blood, glucose or protein. The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists' guidelines (1999) specify fundoscopy but state that no laboratory investigations are specific for ECT. However, the majority of respondents felt that urea, electrolytes, haemoglobin, chest X-ray and electrocardiograph should be routine, probably reflecting local anaesthetic department practice. The assessment of risk associated with the listed medical conditions (see Table 2) was remarkably similar to that of Benbow (1991). Differences included New Zealand psychiatrists being more cautious about older age and less so about hypertension. The American Psychiatric Association (1999) and the Royal College of Psychiatrists (1995) guidelines propose that there are no absolute contraindications to ECT. The Royal Australian and New Zealand College guidelines (1999) nominate only raised intracranial pressure. Nevertheless, most respondents indicated many conditions to be absolute contraindications.
New Zealand psychiatrists were notably more in favour of reducing or stopping all classes of psychotropic medication during ECT as compared with psychiatrists in north-west England (Benbow et al, 1998). The ECT Handbook, however, suggests continuation of an established tricyclic if no change is intended, not stopping an SSRI prior to starting a course of ECT unless a full washout can be achieved, that discontinuing MAOIs is unnecessary and that no special precautions are needed for neuroleptics. Given that ECT is used primarily for depression it is of concern that 20% of psychiatrists would not routinely put a patient on an antidepressant post ECT.
In conclusion, the above findings suggest that guidelines are having insufficient impact on practice.
|
|
Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION TASK FORCE ON ECT (1990) The practice of ECT: Recommendations for treatment, training and privileging. Convulsive Therapy, 2, 85-120.
BENBOW, S. (1991) Old age psychiatrists' views on the use of ECT. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 6, 317-322.
BENBOW, S., TENCH, D. & DARVILL, S. P. (1998)
Electroconvulsive therapy practice in north-west England.
Psychiatric Bulletin,
22,
226-229.
DUFFETT, R. & LELLIOT, P. (1998) Auditing
electroconvulsive therapy, the third age. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 172,
401-405.
ENNS, M. W. & REISS, J. P. (1992) Electroconvulsive therapy (position paper). Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 37, 671-678.[Medline]
KHAN, A., MIROLO, M. H., HUGHS, D., et al (1993) Electroconvulsive therapy. Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 16, 497-513.[Medline]
PIPPARD, J. & ELLAM, L. (1981) Electroconvulsive Treatment in Great Britain, 1980. A Report to the Royal College of Psychiatrists. London: Gaskell.
ROYAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS (1999) Guidelines for the Administration of Electroconvulsive Therapy. Clinical Memorandum 12. Carlton: Blackwell Science Asia.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS (1995) The ECT Handbook. The Second Report of The Royal College of Psychiatrists' Special Committee on ECT. Council Report (CR39). London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
VELAMOOR, V. R., SWAMY, G. N., PARMAR, R. S., et al (1995) Management of suspected neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 40, 545-550.[Medline]
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| British Journal of Psychiatry | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | All RCPsych Journals |