Interrupting the Cycle: Association of Parental Stress and Child/Youth Psychotropic Medication Nonadherence

TitleInterrupting the Cycle: Association of Parental Stress and Child/Youth Psychotropic Medication Nonadherence
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsTheall L, Ninan A, Arbeau K, Mannone J, Stewart SL
JournalChild psychiatry and human development
Volume55
Issue4
Pagination909-915
ISBN Number1573-3327
Accession Number36306028
Keywords*Medication Adherence, *Parents, *Psychotropic Drugs/therapeutic use, *Stress, Psychological, Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Children and youth, Family, Female, Humans, InterRAI, Male, Mental Disorders/drug therapy, Nonadherence, Ontario, Psychotropic medication, social support
Abstract

Efficacy of psychotropic medication depends in large part on successful adherence to prescribed regimens. This study investigated child/youth nonadherence in relation to family dynamics and informal support. The participants were 10,225 children and youth prescribed psychotropic medication and receiving services from 50 Ontario mental health agencies, assessed with the interRAI™ Child and Youth Mental Health (ChYMH) and ChYMH-Developmental Disability (ChYMH-DD) tools. Findings suggest a cycle of parental stress and child/youth medication nonadherence possibly leading to or even perpetuated by worsening psychiatric symptoms. Informal supports do not appear to moderate this cycle. While the present data cannot speak to causes of medication nonadherence in children/youth or where the cycle begins, the results are consistent with the extant literature calling for attention to parental wellbeing to support children/youth for optimal therapeutic benefits. Understanding home dynamics related to nonadherence can assist care planning that engages the family to achieve best possible child/youth outcomes.

DOI10.1007/s10578-022-01448-y
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The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. Ethics clearance for secondary analyses of interRAI data gathered by other organizations was obtained from Western University (REB #106415) and all procedures have been performed in accordance with the ethical standards of Western University and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. For this type of study formal consent is not required.

PMCID

PMC9614754