| Literature DB >> 31234786 |
Socheat Cheng1,2, Tahreem Ghazal Siddiqui3,4, Michael Gossop5, Espen Saxhaug Kristoffersen3,6,7, Christofer Lundqvist3,4,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In older patients, timely recognition and treatment of medication misuse and dependence are crucial to secure medication safety and to avoid increasing health expenditure. Nonetheless, the detection of this condition remains challenging due to the paucity of screening instruments validated for older people. This study assesses diagnostic accuracy, reliability, validity and the factor structure of the Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS) in detecting medication misuse and dependence among hospitalized older patients, focusing on prescribed central nervous system depressants (CNSDs): opioid analgesics, benzodiazepines and z-hypnotics.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic accuracy; Medication dependence; Old age; SDS; Validity and reliability
Year: 2019 PMID: 31234786 PMCID: PMC6591833 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1182-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flow of participants through the study
Characteristics, medication use patterns and severity of dependence score of CNSD users
| CHARACTERISTICS OF CNSD USERS ( | |
| Gender | |
| Men | 34 (34%) |
| Women | 66 (66%) |
| Age, year | |
| Mean (SD) | 78.5 (6.5) |
| Median (range) | 79 (66–90) |
| Age groups | |
| 65–74 | 28 (28%) |
| 75–84 | 51 (51%) |
| ≥ 85 | 21 (21%) |
FREQUENCY OF MEDICATION USE (non-mutually exclusive) | |
| Benzodiazepines | 20 (15%) |
| Opioid analgesics | 45 (34%) |
| Z-hypnotics | 68 (51%) |
| USE PATTERNS | |
| Benzodiazepines | 7 (7%) |
| Opioid analgesics | 21 (21%) |
| Z-hypnotics | 42 (42%) |
| Opioid analgesics + Benzodiazepine | 4 (4%) |
| Opioid analgesics + Z-hypnotics | 17 (17%) |
| Benzodiazepines + Z-hypnotics + Opioid analgesics | 2 (2%) |
SDS SCORE Mean (SD) / Median (range) | |
| CNSDs | 4.2 (3.3) / 4.0 (0–12) |
| Benzodiazepines | 3.5 (3.1) / 3.5 (0–10) |
| Opioid analgesics | 4.1 (3.3) / 3.0 (0–12) |
| Z-hypnotics | 4.4 (3.3) / 4.0 (0–12) |
Fig. 2Discriminative ability, cutoffs and accuracy indices of the Severity of Dependence Scale for central nervous system depressants. ROC curve analysis yielded an AUC of 0.86. A score of 5.5 was determined as the optimal cutoff as it generated the best accuracy indices, highest chi-square test value, maximum Youden’s index and minimum Euclidean distance
Fig. 3Internal consistency and factor structure of the Severity of Dependence Scale for central nervous system depressants. Evidence of acceptable internal consistency of the scale was found according to the Cronbach’s alpha coefficient (α = 0.73). A single-factor solution was extracted. The factor matrix showed that all items loaded strongly on this factor, with correlation coefficients ranging from 0.42 to 0.87. Scree plot test indicated clear debris after the first factor. These results underline the uni-dimensionality of the SDS in measuring psychological dependence of CNSDs in older patients