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Treatment dropout of patients in N ational C ontinuing M anagement and I ntervention P rogram for P sychoses in G uangdong Province from 2006 to 2009: Implication for mental health service reform in C hina
Author(s) -
Ma Ning,
Liu Jin,
Wang Xun,
Gan YuWen,
Ma Hong,
Ng Chee H.,
Jia FuJun,
Yu Xin
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
asia‐pacific psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.654
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1758-5872
pISSN - 1758-5864
DOI - 10.1111/j.1758-5872.2011.00172.x
Subject(s) - chemistry
In 2005, C hina commenced its mental health reform by establishing a national program to move from a hospital‐based service model to an integrated hospital and community treatment model for psychoses, adopting the key principles of and provisions for continuity of care, treatment accessibility and equitable mental health care. This paper reports the rate and associated factors of treatment dropout for patients with psychoses in the national program in G uangdong Province from 2006 to 2009. Methods Adult patients with psychoses followed‐up in two demonstration sites in G uangdong Province were grouped as treatment dropout if they were lost to follow‐up for three consecutive months. Dropout rate was estimated, and associated factors were explored with multifactor binary logistic regression analysis. Results Of 1,386 patients followed up from 2006 to 2009, 73 patients (5.29%) dropped out (five deceased patients were excluded). Poor adherence to medication, having no medication, and having worse global clinical outcome contributed to increased risk of dropout by 12.765 ( P  = 0.0017), 7.400 ( P  = 0.0063) and 6.385 times ( P  = 0.0207), respectively. When course of illness increased by five years, the risk of dropout increased by 1.322 times ( P  = 0.0031). Discussion Treatment dropout rate for patients with psychoses in G uangdong Province appears to be low. Implications for mental health service reform in C hina include assertive follow‐up for patients with history of poor adherence with treatment, free medications to poor patients to increase access to appropriate and affordable treatment, and active psychoeducation for patients with poor insight and their families.

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