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Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions

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Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions. / Atkins, B.; Maden, M.; Birt, L. et al.
In: Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, Vol. 21, No. 6, 30.06.2025, p. 431-443.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Atkins, B, Maden, M, Birt, L, Tromans, S, Swithenbank, Z, Kersey, OR, Smith, P & Scott, S 2025, 'Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions', Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 431-443. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004

APA

Atkins, B., Maden, M., Birt, L., Tromans, S., Swithenbank, Z., Kersey, O. R., Smith, P., & Scott, S. (2025). Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions. Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, 21(6), 431-443. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004

Vancouver

Atkins B, Maden M, Birt L, Tromans S, Swithenbank Z, Kersey OR et al. Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions. Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy. 2025 Jun 30;21(6):431-443. Epub 2025 Mar 13. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004

Author

Atkins, B. ; Maden, M. ; Birt, L. et al. / Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants : A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions. In: Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy. 2025 ; Vol. 21, No. 6. pp. 431-443.

Bibtex

@article{fc9a184644e94bbc89b96a9926667c00,
title = "Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants: A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions",
abstract = "BackgroundAntidepressants are prescribed to treat a range of common mental disorders (CMDs) including depression and anxiety. Most people are prescribed antidepressants for longer than is necessary, leading to avoidable long-term side-effects and exacerbated withdrawal effects, if they eventually discontinue taking them. There is a need for interventions to address the barriers and enablers (determinants) of healthcare professionals (HCPs) who support people to discontinue antidepressants when they are no longer needed.ObjectiveThis scoping review aimed to examine the evidence base regarding the barriers and enablers to HCPs in primary care discontinuing antidepressants prescribed for mild-moderate mental health conditions, as well as interventions to facilitate HCPs to effectively support patients through the discontinuation process.MethodsStudies were identified by undertaking a keyword search of the databases MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL). All peer-reviewed studies from inception to January 2024 were included. Two reviewers independently screened studies and extracted data. Findings were synthesised narratively.ResultsTwo hundred and fifty-three studies were included in title and abstract screening and 30 studies proceeded to full-text screening. Seventeen studies were included; nine reported HCP barriers and/or enablers and eight reported interventions. Time constraints, conflicting priorities and fear of CMD relapse are commonly reported barriers whilst knowledge and skills about how to discontinue antidepressants were the main enablers. Interventions primarily involved education and training for HCPs and provision of information about how to taper antidepressants.DiscussionWhilst existing interventions address the main enablers to HCPs discontinuing antidepressants, inclusion of components to address the barriers is a notable omission and may explain the lack of efficacy of existing interventions. Future interventions should be developed using appropriate theory and address all determinants of HCPs supporting people to discontinue antidepressants.",
author = "B. Atkins and M. Maden and L. Birt and S. Tromans and Z. Swithenbank and O.R. Kersey and P. Smith and S. Scott",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "431--443",
journal = "Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Primary care healthcare professionals supporting patients to discontinue antidepressants

T2 - A scoping review of barriers, enablers and interventions

AU - Atkins, B.

AU - Maden, M.

AU - Birt, L.

AU - Tromans, S.

AU - Swithenbank, Z.

AU - Kersey, O.R.

AU - Smith, P.

AU - Scott, S.

PY - 2025/3/13

Y1 - 2025/3/13

N2 - BackgroundAntidepressants are prescribed to treat a range of common mental disorders (CMDs) including depression and anxiety. Most people are prescribed antidepressants for longer than is necessary, leading to avoidable long-term side-effects and exacerbated withdrawal effects, if they eventually discontinue taking them. There is a need for interventions to address the barriers and enablers (determinants) of healthcare professionals (HCPs) who support people to discontinue antidepressants when they are no longer needed.ObjectiveThis scoping review aimed to examine the evidence base regarding the barriers and enablers to HCPs in primary care discontinuing antidepressants prescribed for mild-moderate mental health conditions, as well as interventions to facilitate HCPs to effectively support patients through the discontinuation process.MethodsStudies were identified by undertaking a keyword search of the databases MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL). All peer-reviewed studies from inception to January 2024 were included. Two reviewers independently screened studies and extracted data. Findings were synthesised narratively.ResultsTwo hundred and fifty-three studies were included in title and abstract screening and 30 studies proceeded to full-text screening. Seventeen studies were included; nine reported HCP barriers and/or enablers and eight reported interventions. Time constraints, conflicting priorities and fear of CMD relapse are commonly reported barriers whilst knowledge and skills about how to discontinue antidepressants were the main enablers. Interventions primarily involved education and training for HCPs and provision of information about how to taper antidepressants.DiscussionWhilst existing interventions address the main enablers to HCPs discontinuing antidepressants, inclusion of components to address the barriers is a notable omission and may explain the lack of efficacy of existing interventions. Future interventions should be developed using appropriate theory and address all determinants of HCPs supporting people to discontinue antidepressants.

AB - BackgroundAntidepressants are prescribed to treat a range of common mental disorders (CMDs) including depression and anxiety. Most people are prescribed antidepressants for longer than is necessary, leading to avoidable long-term side-effects and exacerbated withdrawal effects, if they eventually discontinue taking them. There is a need for interventions to address the barriers and enablers (determinants) of healthcare professionals (HCPs) who support people to discontinue antidepressants when they are no longer needed.ObjectiveThis scoping review aimed to examine the evidence base regarding the barriers and enablers to HCPs in primary care discontinuing antidepressants prescribed for mild-moderate mental health conditions, as well as interventions to facilitate HCPs to effectively support patients through the discontinuation process.MethodsStudies were identified by undertaking a keyword search of the databases MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL). All peer-reviewed studies from inception to January 2024 were included. Two reviewers independently screened studies and extracted data. Findings were synthesised narratively.ResultsTwo hundred and fifty-three studies were included in title and abstract screening and 30 studies proceeded to full-text screening. Seventeen studies were included; nine reported HCP barriers and/or enablers and eight reported interventions. Time constraints, conflicting priorities and fear of CMD relapse are commonly reported barriers whilst knowledge and skills about how to discontinue antidepressants were the main enablers. Interventions primarily involved education and training for HCPs and provision of information about how to taper antidepressants.DiscussionWhilst existing interventions address the main enablers to HCPs discontinuing antidepressants, inclusion of components to address the barriers is a notable omission and may explain the lack of efficacy of existing interventions. Future interventions should be developed using appropriate theory and address all determinants of HCPs supporting people to discontinue antidepressants.

U2 - 10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004

DO - 10.1016/j.sapharm.2025.02.004

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 431

EP - 443

JO - Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy

JF - Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy

IS - 6

ER -