PRN Medication Events in a Forensic Psychiatric Hospital: A Document Analysis of the Prevalence and Reasons

The aim of this study was to describe and explain the prevalence and reasons for as needed medication (pro re nata, PRN) in a forensic psychiatric hospital. We reviewed the documents of 67 long-term inpatients (87% male) over the one-year study period and identified 8626 PRN events. Virtually all of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of forensic mental health Vol. 19; no. 4; pp. 329 - 340
Main Authors Hipp, Kirsi, Repo-Tiihonen, Eila, Kuosmanen, Lauri, Katajisto, Jouko, Kangasniemi, Mari
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia Routledge 01.10.2020
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:The aim of this study was to describe and explain the prevalence and reasons for as needed medication (pro re nata, PRN) in a forensic psychiatric hospital. We reviewed the documents of 67 long-term inpatients (87% male) over the one-year study period and identified 8626 PRN events. Virtually all of the patients received PRN for physical reasons, just over half for psychiatric reasons, and just over one-third for insomnia. The number of PRN events per patient was unevenly distributed. The prevalence of PRN events for both psychiatric reasons (26%) and insomnia (14%) were associated with the female gender, more severe psychiatric symptoms, and lower daily functioning. Half of the patients did not receive PRN for psychiatric reasons. It is likely that the use of such medication was successfully mitigated with scheduled medication and psychosocial approaches. The high number of PRN events for physical reasons (60%) was not explained by the patient characteristics and urgent research is needed on this aspect. Protracted PRN use should be recognized in clinical practice, and consider more structured solutions to develop PRN protocols and evidence-based care. Future research should examine how PRN is integrated with patients' regular treatment and non-pharmacological methods.
ISSN:1499-9013
1932-9903
DOI:10.1080/14999013.2020.1774686