# Improving the Sexual Wellbeing of Patients with Psychotic Illness

**Authors:** N. Stanton, E. Angova, K. Diamantopoulos

PMC · DOI: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2024.1536 · European Psychiatry · 2024-08-27

## TL;DR

This paper shows that sexual dysfunction is under-identified in patients with psychosis and that using a revised screening tool improves detection.

## Contribution

The study introduces a revised version of the Arizona Sexual Experience Scale with simpler language to better identify sexual dysfunction in psychotic patients.

## Key findings

- Only 8% of patients had documented sexual symptoms without the ASEX.
- 56% of patients screened with ASEX showed signs of sexual dysfunction.
- A revised ASEX with simpler language was developed after feedback from patients.

## Abstract

Sexual dysfunction (SD) is common in psychotic illness including schizophrenia, occurring in 30-82% of patients. It negatively impacts wellbeing and antipsychotic compliance, resulting in higher risk of relapse and hospitalisation. Due to over-reliance on spontaneous reports from patients, SD is typically under-identified which prevents investigation and treatment.

To establish whether SD is under-identified in patients with psychosis in a general adult community mental health team; to elicit whether the Arizona Sexual Experience Scale (ASEX) improves identification; to investigate and manage identified cases of SD; to make recommendations about identification and monitoring of SD in this patient population.

A 12-month retrospective audit of patients with psychosis prescribed a long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotic (n=36) to identify sexual symptoms was completed. The ASEX was subsequently issued to screen for SD.

Audit: 3/36 (8%) patients had documented sexual symptoms. Of the 18/36 patients that completed the ASEX: 10 (56%) exhibited SD. 4 consented to further investigation. 5 patients experienced significant difficulties with the language used in the ASEX. At the end of the project we revised the ASEX with simpler, colloquial language.

Implementation of the ASEX results in clear improvements in identification and monitoring of SD. Maudsley Practice Guidelines can inform investigation and management of SD. We suggest a review of NICE guidance to incorporate the above into clinical practice. Further work is needed to establish whether the revised ASEX can be developed and validated.

None Declared

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** schizophrenia (MONDO:0005090)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11861021