Patients with SMI are losing many years of life to preventable and treatable medical illnesses. Solutions to the problem will require attention to patient, provider, and system-level factors.
Background
Individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder face a higher risk of early death due to cardiovascular disease and other preventable chronic illnesses. Young adulthood is a critical window of development for lifestyle interventions to improve the long-term health and quality of life in this population. Fit Forward is an NIH-funded randomized clinical trial examining the effectiveness of a group lifestyle intervention (PeerFIT) enhanced with mobile health technology compared to one-on-one mobile lifestyle coaching with Basic Education in fitness and nutrition supported by a wearable Activity Tracking device (BEAT) in achieving clinically significant weight loss and improved cardiorespiratory fitness in young adults with SMI.
Methods
Fit Forward targets 144 young adults (18 to 35 years) with SMI and a body mass index (BMI) of ≥ 25 receiving public mental health services. In a two-arm randomized clinical trial, participants will be randomly assigned with equal probability to PeerFIT or BEAT, stratified by birth sex and psychiatric diagnosis. Participants will be assessed at baseline, 6, and 12 months. The primary outcome is cardiovascular risk reduction indicated by either clinically significant weight loss (5% or greater) or increased fitness (>50 m on the 6-Minute Walk Test). Secondary outcomes include change in BMI, lipids, and hemoglobin A1c. Perceived self-efficacy for exercise and peer support will be evaluated as mechanisms underlying intervention effects.
Conclusion
If effective, PeerFIT will provide a potentially scalable approach to addressing health risks among young adults with SMI in mental health settings.
Specialized transitional shelters are available in various cities to provide assistance to homeless individuals with serious mental illness. Little is known about the population using such shelters. The authors conducted a retrospective chart review to collect demographic, social, and clinical data of residents in a state-operated mental health transitional shelter in Massachusetts. A total of 74 subjects were included. Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders were present in 67.6 % of the sample and mood disorders in 35.1 %. Substance use disorders were documented in 44.6 %. Chronic medical illness (mostly hypertension, dyslipidemia, asthma, and diabetes) was found in 82.4 %. The co-occurrence of a psychiatric and substance use disorder and chronic medical illness was found in 36.5 %. The majority (75.7 %) of patients had a history of legal charges. Homeless individuals with serious mental illness served by specialized transitional shelters represent a population with complex psychiatric, medical and social needs.
Provider-education combined with introduction of a documentation bundle in the electronic medical record increased rates of documented metabolic screening in patients being prescribed antipsychotic medications by psychiatry residents.
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