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Predicting intentions towards long-term antidepressant use in the management of people with depression in primary care: A longitudinal survey study

Predicting intentions towards long-term antidepressant use in the management of people with depression in primary care: A longitudinal survey study
Predicting intentions towards long-term antidepressant use in the management of people with depression in primary care: A longitudinal survey study
Background: over the last two decades, antidepressant prescribing in the UK has increased considerably, due to an increased number of people staying on antidepressants for longer. Even when treatment is no longer clinically indicated, qualitative research suggests many people continue due to a fear of depressive relapse or antidepressant withdrawal symptoms. The quantitative effects of peoples’ beliefs and attitudes towards long-term antidepressant use remain relatively unexplored.

Objectives: to determine the extent to which beliefs and attitudes towards antidepressant treatment predict intentions to stop or continue long-term use; and whether intentions translate into actual discontinuation.

Methods: a questionnaire survey formed the main component of an embedded mixed-methods study. Twenty general practices posted questionnaires to adults aged over 18 receiving continuous antidepressant prescriptions for over two years. Outcomes and predictors were determined using an extended model of the Theory of Planned Behaviour, conducting exploratory descriptive and regression analyses. The primary outcome was participants’ intentions to discontinue antidepressants. The secondary outcome of behaviour change was determined by any change in antidepressant dosage at six months.

Results: 277 people were surveyed from 20 practices, with 10 years median antidepressant duration. Mean questionnaire scores for intention and subjective norms towards starting to come off antidepressants were low, and 85% of participants declared that continuing their antidepressant was necessary. Prescribing outcomes retrieved from 175 participants’ medical records six months after they completed the survey found 86% had not changed their antidepressant, 9% reduced the dose, only 1% discontinued their antidepressant, and 4% increased the dose. More favourable attitudes towards stopping, and normative beliefs about depression, were the strongest predictors of intentions to stop long-term antidepressant treatment.

Conclusion: given few intentions to stop taking antidepressants, patients should be made more aware of the importance of ongoing antidepressant monitoring and review from their primary care practitioners. This would promote discussion to support an attitudinal change and initiation of antidepressant tapering where appropriate.
Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antidepressive Agents/administration & dosage, Attitude to Health, Depression/drug therapy, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Intention, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care/organization & administration, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Young Adult
1932-6203
e0299676
Dewar-Haggart, Rachel
7ae70377-352a-4297-9798-a6aed0e1c04b
Muller, Ingrid
2569bf42-51bd-40da-bbfd-dd4dbbd62cad
Bishop, Felicity
1f5429c5-325f-4ac4-aae3-6ba85d079928
Geraghty, Adam W A
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5
Dewar-Haggart, Rachel
7ae70377-352a-4297-9798-a6aed0e1c04b
Muller, Ingrid
2569bf42-51bd-40da-bbfd-dd4dbbd62cad
Bishop, Felicity
1f5429c5-325f-4ac4-aae3-6ba85d079928
Geraghty, Adam W A
2c6549fe-9868-4806-b65a-21881c1930af
Stuart, Beth
626862fc-892b-4f6d-9cbb-7a8d7172b209
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5

Dewar-Haggart, Rachel, Muller, Ingrid, Bishop, Felicity, Geraghty, Adam W A, Stuart, Beth and Kendrick, Tony (2025) Predicting intentions towards long-term antidepressant use in the management of people with depression in primary care: A longitudinal survey study. PLoS ONE, 20 (3), e0299676, [e0299676]. (doi:10.1101/2024.02.16.24302927).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: over the last two decades, antidepressant prescribing in the UK has increased considerably, due to an increased number of people staying on antidepressants for longer. Even when treatment is no longer clinically indicated, qualitative research suggests many people continue due to a fear of depressive relapse or antidepressant withdrawal symptoms. The quantitative effects of peoples’ beliefs and attitudes towards long-term antidepressant use remain relatively unexplored.

Objectives: to determine the extent to which beliefs and attitudes towards antidepressant treatment predict intentions to stop or continue long-term use; and whether intentions translate into actual discontinuation.

Methods: a questionnaire survey formed the main component of an embedded mixed-methods study. Twenty general practices posted questionnaires to adults aged over 18 receiving continuous antidepressant prescriptions for over two years. Outcomes and predictors were determined using an extended model of the Theory of Planned Behaviour, conducting exploratory descriptive and regression analyses. The primary outcome was participants’ intentions to discontinue antidepressants. The secondary outcome of behaviour change was determined by any change in antidepressant dosage at six months.

Results: 277 people were surveyed from 20 practices, with 10 years median antidepressant duration. Mean questionnaire scores for intention and subjective norms towards starting to come off antidepressants were low, and 85% of participants declared that continuing their antidepressant was necessary. Prescribing outcomes retrieved from 175 participants’ medical records six months after they completed the survey found 86% had not changed their antidepressant, 9% reduced the dose, only 1% discontinued their antidepressant, and 4% increased the dose. More favourable attitudes towards stopping, and normative beliefs about depression, were the strongest predictors of intentions to stop long-term antidepressant treatment.

Conclusion: given few intentions to stop taking antidepressants, patients should be made more aware of the importance of ongoing antidepressant monitoring and review from their primary care practitioners. This would promote discussion to support an attitudinal change and initiation of antidepressant tapering where appropriate.

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2024.02.16.24302927v1.full - Author's Original
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More information

Submitted date: 20 February 2024
Published date: 4 March 2025
Keywords: Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antidepressive Agents/administration & dosage, Attitude to Health, Depression/drug therapy, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Intention, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Primary Health Care/organization & administration, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498666
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498666
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 3beee9ef-046f-485e-b63b-9cd6e2ec4f7a
ORCID for Rachel Dewar-Haggart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3757-1152
ORCID for Ingrid Muller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9341-6133
ORCID for Felicity Bishop: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8737-6662
ORCID for Adam W A Geraghty: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7984-8351
ORCID for Beth Stuart: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5432-7437
ORCID for Tony Kendrick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1618-9381

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Date deposited: 25 Feb 2025 17:41
Last modified: 23 Apr 2025 01:45

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