Wm. Glazer, THE IMPACT OF MANAGED CARE SYSTEMS ON RELAPSE PREVENTION AND QUALITY-OF-LIFE FOR PATIENTS WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA, European neuropsychopharmacology, 6, 1996, pp. 35-39
In general clinical practice, relapse rates for patients with schizoph
renia are worse than well-controlled studies suggest are achievable. T
his paper discusses the reasons for this shortfall and suggests that p
roperly delivered ''managed care'' could reduce the gap between theory
and practice. Shortsighted attempts to limit expenditure can lead to
overall increases in expenditure on the care of patients with severe m
ental illness, as has happened in New Hampshire, where reducing expend
iture on psychiatric drugs led to an increase in other costs that exce
eded the savings on drugs by seventeen-fold. Other studies have shown
that patients with schizophrenia can be managed in the community, and
that the provision of proper community-based support services reduces
the overall costs of caring for these patients. An analysis of the ove
rall costs of medial care before and after the introduction of risperi
done has also revealed that total health care expenditure fell, even t
hough expenditure on medication increased. Proper managed care should
ensure that services are integrated and that the appropriate level is
provided for patients with severe mental disorders, such as schizophre
nia. Drugs, such as risperidone, which have wider therapeutic spectrum
s than the older conventional neuroleptics, are likely to enable these
co-ordinated services to provide better and more comprehensive care o
f patients with schizophrenia.