Physical ill-health is rife among the severely mentally ill in Britain, according to new research published today by the University of East Anglia (UEA).
Physical ill-health is rife among the severely mentally ill in Britain, according to new research published today by the University of East Anglia (UEA). In a study of almost 800 patients with severe mental illness such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, two-thirds were found to be overweight or obese, and a disproportionate number suffered from diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure and raised cholesterol.
The results of the two-year project in Kent are published today in the peer-reviewed journal BMC Psychiatry.
During the study, the researchers introduced a Wellbeing Support Programme and trained more than 200 mental health nurses in its use. The physical health of 782 patients (mostly white, male and in their late 30s) was screened as part of the programme and appropriate intervention offered. The findings of the screening programme revealed:
- Inactivity, poor diet, smoking and excessive alcohol consumption were the norm
- Obesity was prevalent with 66 per cent having a BMI greater than 25
- Thirty-four per cent of patients were suffering from high blood pressure
- Fifty-two per cent had abnormally high cholesterol levels
- A surprisingly high proportion were being prescribed atypical antipsychotic drugs associated with weight gain
Life expectancy for people with severe mental illness such as schizophrenia is reduced by up to 25 years. The major cause of death is not suicide, as many practitioners believe, but cardiovascular disease. While clinicians are well-practised at assessing the risk of self-harm, they fail to assess the risk of cardio-vascular disease.
"Mental health nurses do a tough job and are compassionate and highly committed. But they do not tend to be skilled at managing the physical health of their patients and they often don't lead entirely healthy lifestyles themselves," said lead author Prof Richard Gray of UEA's School of Nursing and Midwifery.
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Separate research conducted by Prof Gray has shown that the incidence of smoking among mental health workers is higher than in the general population and nurses who smoke are less likely to promote smoking cessation in their patients.
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Source-Eurekalert