North West London Study Reveals Disparities in Psychotropic โDrug Prescriptions for Children
A new population-based study of nearly 763,000 childrenโค and โyoung โขpeople (CYP) in North West London has revealed critically important variations inโค the prescription โratesโข of SSRIs and ADHD medications linked toโ sociodemographic factors and โฃgeographical location. The findings, publishedโฃ [publication details not provided in source], โขhighlight potential mental health inequalities and underscore the need for more comprehensive data collection to address these disparities.
The study, analyzing prescription data from 2020-2022, foundโ that 2.20% โขof CYP were prescribed an SSRIโ (95% CI 2.17% to 2.24%) and โ0.50%โ an ADHDโ medicationโ (95% โCI โ0.49% to 0.52%). notably, higher socioeconomic deprivation correlated wiht increased SSRI prescriptions (2.5% inโค the most deprived areas), โขwhile lower deprivation was associated with โคhigher ADHD medication prescriptions โข(0.70%). โThis โฃpattern โคwasn’t consistent across allโฃ Londonโฃ boroughs, and sociodemographic factors explained limitedโฃ variation in prescription rates – 18% for SSRIs and 6%โค for ADHD medications (Pseudo R2 0.18 and 0.06 respectively).
Researchers examined associations between prescriptionโ rates and factors including age, gender, โgeographicalโฃ area (local authority),โ ethnicity, and socioeconomic deprivation, measured using the Index of Multiple โDeprivation. Theโฃ divergent prescribing patterns observed suggest that access to, or appropriateness of, mental health services mayโ differ based on whereโค a child lives โand their socioeconomic background.
The study concludes that theseโฃ variations could exacerbate existing mental health inequalities. Researchers advocate for โคexpandedโค use of linked electronic health records, specifically including data โon mental health diagnoses and service utilization, to better understandโฃ the โขrelationship betweenโข diagnosis and treatment over time and to effectively monitor andโ address these inequities.
Keywords: Attention Deficit disorder with Hyperactivity; Child & adolescent psychiatry; Electronic Health Records; Health Equity; MENTAL HEALTH; Prescriptions.