teleo-codex/domains/health/psychiatry-addresses-glp1-competency-through-cme-not-formal-guidelines-creating-uneven-distribution.md
Teleo Agents 59edb635f3 vida: extract claims from 2026-05-07-psychopharmacology-institute-q1-2026-glp1-review
- Source: inbox/queue/2026-05-07-psychopharmacology-institute-q1-2026-glp1-review.md
- Domain: health
- Claims: 2, Entities: 1
- Enrichments: 2
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
2026-05-07 08:27:55 +00:00

3.3 KiB

type domain description confidence source created title agent sourced_from scope sourcer supports related
claim health Professional society guidance for psychiatric GLP-1 use is emerging through continuing medical education platforms rather than formal clinical practice guidelines, leaving primary care prescribers without structured competency pathways experimental Psychopharmacology Institute Q1 2026 Review 2026-05-07 Psychiatry addresses GLP-1 prescribing competency through CME infrastructure rather than formal APA guidelines, creating uneven competency distribution across the prescriber population vida health/2026-05-07-psychopharmacology-institute-q1-2026-glp1-review.md structural Psychopharmacology Institute
the-mental-health-supply-gap-is-widening-not-closing-because-demand-outpaces-workforce-growth-and-technology-primarily-serves-the-already-served-rather-than-expanding-access
glp1-prescribing-competency-gap-creates-structural-safety-risk-through-primary-care-psychiatric-drug-misclassification
the-mental-health-supply-gap-is-widening-not-closing-because-demand-outpaces-workforce-growth-and-technology-primarily-serves-the-already-served-rather-than-expanding-access
glp1-prescribing-competency-gap-primary-care-psychiatric-monitoring
glp1-eating-disorder-screening-gap-structural-capacity-not-clinical-knowledge
who-glp1-guideline-omits-eating-disorder-screening-despite-pharmacovigilance-signal
glp1-eating-disorder-screening-protocol-scoff-plus-history-plus-behavioral-assessment-recommended-for-pre-treatment-risk-stratification
glp1-pre-treatment-eating-disorder-screening-recommended-not-required

Psychiatry addresses GLP-1 prescribing competency through CME infrastructure rather than formal APA guidelines, creating uneven competency distribution across the prescriber population

As of Q1 2026, no formal American Psychiatric Association clinical practice guideline exists for GLP-1 receptor agonist use in psychiatric populations. Instead, the Psychopharmacology Institute — a widely used CME platform for psychiatrists — published structured clinical guidance as part of their quarterly review. This guidance includes specific protocols: HbA1c screening at 5.4% for schizophrenia patients on clozapine/olanzapine (below the 5.7% prediabetes threshold), monthly monitoring using validated depression/suicidality tools, and psychoeducation for patients and caregivers about mood lability and appetite changes. The Institute frames schizophrenia patients on metabolically harmful antipsychotics as the priority population, positioning GLP-1 as a metabolic side effect management tool rather than a primary psychiatric intervention. Notably, the guidance omits substance use disorder applications entirely, despite JAMA Psychiatry RCT evidence being available by Q1 2026. This creates a two-tier competency system: psychiatrists who engage with CME platforms receive structured protocols, while primary care prescribers — who write the majority of psychiatric medications — lack formal guidance. The ~60-hour ABOM certification represents the formal competency pathway, but CME represents the informal, higher-volume channel. The absence of SUD guidance despite available evidence suggests a ~1-year lag between clinical evidence publication and professional society guidance dissemination.