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Should Psych Patients Take Medication for Side Effects?

March 21, 2016 Becky Oberg

Psych patients may require medication to treat the side-effects of their medications. Is taking one med to treat the effects of another a good idea? Read this.

Should psychiatric patients take medication for side effects? Recently, my psychiatrist increased the medicine for my restless leg syndrome, which is a side effect of one of my antipsychotics. Now I'm constantly sleepy. I was talking with a friend at church when I said, "Sometimes I have to take medication because my psychiatric medications cause unpleasant side effects."

The side effects range from the annoying (restless leg syndrome) to the serious (heart condition). So should psychiatric patients take medication to treat the side effects of a psychiatric medication?

No -- Psychiatric Patients Shouldn't Take Medications for Side Effects

Some people say we should suck it up and suffer the side effect. I am not one of these people, but I understand their argument. The more medications we are on, the greater the chance of a drug-drug interaction. Interactions can range from mild and harmless to life-threatening. The doctor may not always be aware of these interactions when he or she prescribes the medication--I remember one case when a pharmacist refused to fill one of my prescriptions because it could cause a life-threatening reaction--something my psychiatrist either did not know or did not mention.

A paper on Medscape.com reads:

The vast increase in the number of new psychopharmacologic agents over the last 20 years has made more therapeutic options available, but it also has made treating patients more complicated. Prescribing practices, which include the concurrent administration of a variety of psychotropic drugs, have made the risk of drug-drug interactions more likely. Drug interactions are known to play a significant role in the incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) both in the community and in hospitals. Reducing ADRs is a critical element in providing safe medication use for hospitalized patients. According to a recently published study, psychiatric medications can account for up to 50% of the ADRs for hospitalized patients with mental illness, many of which can be attributed to drug-drug interactions. ADRs resulting from drug-drug interactions leading to hospitalization are often preventable. It has been estimated that 26% of ADRs requiring hospital admissions may be due to drug-drug interactions. Even ADRs that are deemed to be "not severe" can have significant impact on patients with a psychiatric illness, as a growing body of evidence suggests a strong relationship between drug-drug interactions, treatment failures, and higher health care costs due to avoidable medical complications.

So there's the argument against medication for side effects. But the people who make this argument often aren't the ones who live with the side effects.

Yes -- Psychiatric Patients Should Take Medications for Side Effects

Psych patients may require medication to treat the side-effects of their medications. Is taking one med to treat the effects of another a good idea? Read this.Sometimes medication for side effects either improves quality of life or is necessary to keep a psychiatric patient out of both the psychiatric ward and the general hospital. I take some medications for side effects, and I'm grateful for them even though I know the risk of drug-drug interactions. These medications both improve the quality of my life and keep me out of the hospital--psychiatric and general.

My medication for my restless leg syndrome is a prime example, as is my heart medication. My restless leg syndrome medication stops my legs from trying to run a marathon without the rest of my body at night, thus enabling me to sleep without relying on addictive sleep medications. A good night's sleep is vital to both mental and physical health--lack of sleep triggers my psychotic episodes. My heart medication usually stops palpitations and slows my heart rate down from above 120 at rest (a medical emergency). Without these medications, my health would be considerably worse.

I am not going to say a psychiatric patient should suck it up and not take medication for side effects or that a psychiatric patient should definitely take medication for side effects. That is a decision that should be between the treatment team and the patient.

Why More Research into Medication Side Effects Is Vital

As I researched this article, I discovered psychiatric drug-drug interactions are common. We need to know which medication does what with what drug. We need to know what drug interactions are common in order to prevent them, like the pharmacist I mentioned earlier did. We need more research into this, as well as an easily accessible national database of common drug interactions. This database should be available to both doctors and pharmacists. If a drug interaction can be avoided, it should be avoided.

Our knowledge of psychiatry is where our knowledge of cardiology was 200 years ago. We know the organ exists, we know it sometimes gets sick, and we know certain things make these illnesses better but have risks of their own due to our lack of knowledge about how they work (Why Are Psychiatric Drug Side-Effects So Severe?). We need more research into psychiatry so we can create psychiatric medications with fewer side effects--that way we don't have to ask the question "Should psychiatric patients take medication for side effects?"

You can also find Becky Oberg on Google+, Facebook and Twitter and Linkedin.

APA Reference
Oberg, B. (2016, March 21). Should Psych Patients Take Medication for Side Effects?, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 4 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/recoveringfrommentalillness/2016/03/should-psychiatric-patients-take-medication-for-side-effects



Author: Becky Oberg

Dr Musli Ferati
March, 28 2016 at 5:47 pm

Psychiatric medication as first and crucial treatment of any mental disorder implicit numerous side effects, that may be dangerous for respective psychiatric patient. Its usage should be under close watching of clinical psychiatrist because psychotropic drugs have got their specific nus effects and interact with many others drugs. Furthermore, psychiatric drugs cause many predictable and unpredictable reactions to respective psychiatric patients, that may be fatal and with long term complications, as well. On the other hand, medication of psychiatric patients is of long duration, with periodic fluctuation of clinical picture of pertain mental illnesses. so allgoritm and protocol of psychiatric medication should be titrated by individual basis. Eventual side effects should be noted and in dependence of their severity they must be treated by adequate drugs. There are many cases that should interrupt or decrease the dosage of critical drug. It depend from numerous biological, pharmacological and comorbid statements, what kind of intervention is more appropriate in patient with side effects complications. In order to cut down unpleasant side effects of psychotropic medication, it ought to be familiar with reactions and complaints of patient who take any medication, especially in the beginning of psychopharmacologic treatments. It ought to install therapeutic alliance with psychiatric patient or with its close kinsman to prevent and to medicate side effects of psychiatric medications. Otherwise, we shall face with numerous side effects, that seriously compromise psychiatric treatment and management of any psychiatric patients.

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