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Improving the monitoring and management of Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH) in community mental healthsServices: a quality improvement approach

Improving the monitoring and management of Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH) in community mental healthsServices: a quality improvement approach
Improving the monitoring and management of Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH) in community mental healthsServices: a quality improvement approach
Clozapine is the only approved antipsychotic for refractory schizophrenia to date. It can cause a range of serious and fatal adverse effects, including Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH). While guidance is readily available to help manage CIGH effectively in hospital inpatients, practical recommendations applicable to the community (outpatient) setting are lacking. This project set out to improve the prevention, detection and management of CIGH in psychiatric outpatients. An initial baseline audit followed by quality improvement work was undertaken in a busy support worker-run community clozapine clinic focusing on, education and training, risk assessments and clinical documentation. The project was registered and managed using the Life QI web-based platform, where a set of primary and secondary drivers were defined and change ideas were executed. Qualitative and quantitative data were collected over a three-month period, demonstrating a significant improvement in clinical documentation (up from 36% to 99%). 23% of enhanced risk assessments resulted in treatment recommendations, modifiable risk factors were proactively discussed in 53% of clinic appointments and 65% of patients were provided with additional written information on CIGH. It was evident from staff and our patient feedback that further efforts would be required to continue to raise awareness about harms of unmanaged constipation among this client group. Future approaches may include enhanced collaborative efforts with primary care, and improving the skill mix in existing clozapine clinics, which could include the utilisation of mental health pharmacists.
2226-4787
Adam, Balazs
853e2edd-2034-4c22-b3ef-18a49f4d5537
Ayad, Osama
b0e18ea0-59ae-4445-bfee-83be7312996d
Adam, Balazs
853e2edd-2034-4c22-b3ef-18a49f4d5537
Ayad, Osama
b0e18ea0-59ae-4445-bfee-83be7312996d

Adam, Balazs and Ayad, Osama (2024) Improving the monitoring and management of Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH) in community mental healthsServices: a quality improvement approach. Pharmacy, 12 (5), [141]. (doi:10.3390/pharmacy12050141).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Clozapine is the only approved antipsychotic for refractory schizophrenia to date. It can cause a range of serious and fatal adverse effects, including Clozapine-Induced Gastrointestinal Hypomotility (CIGH). While guidance is readily available to help manage CIGH effectively in hospital inpatients, practical recommendations applicable to the community (outpatient) setting are lacking. This project set out to improve the prevention, detection and management of CIGH in psychiatric outpatients. An initial baseline audit followed by quality improvement work was undertaken in a busy support worker-run community clozapine clinic focusing on, education and training, risk assessments and clinical documentation. The project was registered and managed using the Life QI web-based platform, where a set of primary and secondary drivers were defined and change ideas were executed. Qualitative and quantitative data were collected over a three-month period, demonstrating a significant improvement in clinical documentation (up from 36% to 99%). 23% of enhanced risk assessments resulted in treatment recommendations, modifiable risk factors were proactively discussed in 53% of clinic appointments and 65% of patients were provided with additional written information on CIGH. It was evident from staff and our patient feedback that further efforts would be required to continue to raise awareness about harms of unmanaged constipation among this client group. Future approaches may include enhanced collaborative efforts with primary care, and improving the skill mix in existing clozapine clinics, which could include the utilisation of mental health pharmacists.

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pharmacy-12-00141-v2 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2024
Published date: 13 September 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508490
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508490
ISSN: 2226-4787
PURE UUID: 036f72ab-9d0d-4017-90ed-1f862dd289c4
ORCID for Balazs Adam: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4764-5829

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Date deposited: 23 Jan 2026 17:39
Last modified: 24 Jan 2026 03:23

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Contributors

Author: Balazs Adam ORCID iD
Author: Osama Ayad

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