M Kölzsch1, J Bolbrinker, D Dräger, J Scholze, M Huber, R Kreutz.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To analyse and evaluate the use of antihypertensive medication in elderly patients of nursing homes in Germany.
METHODS: Data from a large German health insurance company were collected in a cross sectional study. Included were all insured persons aged 65 years or older, who were residents of a nursing home between 1 April and 30 June 2007 throughout Germany. Antihypertensive drugs were those classified according to the current guidelines published by the German Hypertension Society.
RESULTS: The study comprised 8,685 residents of nursing homes, 84 % women. The mean age was 84 years (range 65 - 106 years). Antihypertensive drug prescriptions accounted for 17 % of all drug prescriptions and about 70 % of all residents received at least one prescription for antihypertensive drugs. The most frequently prescribed antihypertensive drugs were diuretics, of which 70 % were loop diuretics. Potentially inappropriate combinations of antihypertensive drugs were noted in 5.2 % of patients receiving these drugs.
CONCLUSION: Antihypertensive drugs account for a notable part (17 %) of all drug prescriptions in elderly residents of nursing homes throughout Germany. These results indicate that only a minority of all residents were treated with potentially inappropriate or potentially harmful drug combinations. However, the relatively high rate of prescriptions for loop diuretics is a matter of potential concern in this vulnerable group of patients. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
OBJECTIVE: To analyse and evaluate the use of antihypertensive medication in elderly patients of nursing homes in Germany.
METHODS: Data from a large German health insurance company were collected in a cross sectional study. Included were all insured persons aged 65 years or older, who were residents of a nursing home between 1 April and 30 June 2007 throughout Germany. Antihypertensive drugs were those classified according to the current guidelines published by the German Hypertension Society.
RESULTS: The study comprised 8,685 residents of nursing homes, 84 % women. The mean age was 84 years (range 65 - 106 years). Antihypertensive drug prescriptions accounted for 17 % of all drug prescriptions and about 70 % of all residents received at least one prescription for antihypertensive drugs. The most frequently prescribed antihypertensive drugs were diuretics, of which 70 % were loop diuretics. Potentially inappropriate combinations of antihypertensive drugs were noted in 5.2 % of patients receiving these drugs.
CONCLUSION: Antihypertensive drugs account for a notable part (17 %) of all drug prescriptions in elderly residents of nursing homes throughout Germany. These results indicate that only a minority of all residents were treated with potentially inappropriate or potentially harmful drug combinations. However, the relatively high rate of prescriptions for loop diuretics is a matter of potential concern in this vulnerable group of patients. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.
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Year: 2010
PMID: 21108153 DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1269407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dtsch Med Wochenschr ISSN: 0012-0472 Impact factor: 0.628