Oliver Freudenreich, MD, FACLP Co-Director, MGH Schizophrenia Clinical and Research Program Associate Professor of Psychiatry Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts
Nicholas Kontos, MD, FACLP Director, Fellowship in Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry Assistant Professor of Psychiatry Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts
John Querques, MD Vice Chairman for Hospital Services Department of Psychiatry Tufts Medical Center Associate Professor of Psychiatry Tufts University School of Medicine Boston, Massachusetts
Disclosures Dr. Freudenreich has received grant or research support from Alkermes, Avanir, Janssen, and Otsuka, and has served as a consultant to American Psychiatric Association, Alkermes, Janssen, Neurocrine, Novartis, and Roche. Dr. Kontos and Dr. Querques report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.
Some areas of the country succeeded in reducing infections and limiting community spread, which ushered in an uneasy sense of normalcy even while the pandemic continues. At least for now, these locales can focus on rebuilding and preparing for expectable fluctuations in disease activity, including the arrival of the annual flu season on top of COVID-19.44 Recovery is not a return to the status quo ante but building stronger communities—“building back better.”45 Unless there is a continuum of care, shortcomings in one sector will have ripple effects through the entire system, particularly for psychiatric care for patients with SMI, which was inadequate before the pandemic.
Ensuring access to critical care was a priority during the pandemic’s early phase but came at the price of deferring other types of care, such as routine primary care; the coming months will see the downstream consequences of this approach,46 including for patients with SMI.
In the meantime, doing our job as clinicians, as Camus’s fictitious Dr. Bernard Rieux from the epigraph responds when asked how to define decency, may be the best we can do in these times. This includes contributing to and molding our field’s future and fostering a sense of agency in our patients and in ourselves. Major goals will be to preserve lessons learned, maintain flexibility, and avoid a return to unhelpful overregulation and payment models that do not reflect the flexible, person-centered care so important for patients with SMI.47
Bottom Line
During a pandemic, patients with serious mental illness may be easily forgotten as other issues overshadow the needs of this impoverished group. During a pandemic, the priority treatment goals for these patients are infection control, relapse prevention, and preventing treatment disengagement and loneliness. A pandemic requires changes in how patients with serious mental illness will receive psychopharmacology and psychotherapy.
Related Resources
Huremović D (ed). Psychiatry of pandemics: a mental health response to infection outbreak. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature Switzerland AG; 2019.
Ursano RJ, Fullerton CS, Weisaeth L, et al (eds). Textbook of disaster psychiatry. 2nd ed. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press; 2017.