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Antipsychotic medications frequently cause metabolic side-effects, such as abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, cholesterol abnormalities, and blood sugar dysregulation, all of which can lead to what is known as the Metabolic Syndrome and serious long-term cardiovascular health problems. Therefore, it is important that metabolic issues be addressed as part of a holistic approach to the mental health treatment of these patients.
As with the general population, improving metabolic health involves lifestyle changes - i.e., addressing daily habits regarding eating, physical exercise, stress and sleep management, and lifestyle habits such as smoking. However, there is growing recognition in the medical field that education is not enough for people to create meaningful and sustained lifestyle change. The emerging field of Integrative Health Coaching addresses this issue and provides a clinical framework for helping people successfully develop and achieve personalized lifestyle goals. The investigators have therefore decided to investigate whether health coaching techniques may have benefit in addressing metabolic health issues in people with psychosis disorders. The intent is to complement usual psychiatric and medical care, and also promote patient engagement in managing one's overall health.
This study will investigate whether Integrative Health Coaching is a useful clinical tool to facilitate healthy lifestyle behaviour and thereby improve metabolic health in people with psychosis disorders.
Full description
Antipsychotic drugs are widely used to treat not only psychosis but an increasing number of other psychiatric indications. The prevalence of antipsychotic drug use in British Columbia is increasing at a high rate, especially in youth. Second generation ("atypical") antipsychotic drugs, while bereft of the neurological side-effects of their predecessors, commonly cause metabolic syndrome. This includes hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia, insulin resistance, weight gain and hypertension - a cluster of side-effects that puts patients at strongly increased risk of cardiometabolic disorders such as Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Drug therapies to reduce metabolic dysregulation have provided limited benefits. It is recognized that lifestyle changes that address daily habits regarding eating, physical exercise, stress and sleep management, and lifestyle habits such as smoking, represent a complementary approach to additional drug therapy. The emerging field of Integrative Health Coaching addresses this issue and provides a clinical framework for helping people successfully develop and achieve personalized lifestyle goals. This study will investigate whether Health Coaching is a useful clinical tool to facilitate healthy lifestyle behavior and thereby improve metabolic health in people with psychotic illness.
HYPOTHESIS: In a first-episode psychosis population that have recently begun treatment with atypical antipsychotic drugs, the inclusion of an Integrative Health Coaching goal-setting model will significantly improve patients' attitudes towards, and increase the frequency of behaviours related to healthy living, as indicated by the Short-Form 36, the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire, and the Health Value Scale.
RESEARCH PLAN: The investigators will conduct a non-blinded clinical trial of the efficacy of Integrative Health Coaching techniques in 40 subjects who are being treated at the Vancouver/Richmond Early Psychosis Intervention program, which provides specialty care to patients with suspected or newly diagnosed psychotic disorders. All subjects will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups (n = 20 subjects per group). In the first group, subjects will receive treatment for psychosis based on the current standard of care, which includes psychosocial training, education and pharmacological treatment. The second group of subjects will receive not only the standard of care treatment for psychosis, but additional Health Coaching to improve physical health. Subjects in both treatment groups will be given questionnaires to assess health attitudes and behaviours, and will receive routine blood work to monitor metabolic dysregulation, at baseline and months 1, 2, 3 and 6 from when they enter the study. Data will be collected and analyzed for differences between the two groups at the end of the study. Results will be analyzed based on intent-to-treat analysis, and comparison of metabolic and other health indices compared between the two groups using t-test and chi-square analyses.
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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