| Literature DB >> 35783113 |
Christina Christopher1, Bhuvan Kc1, Sunil Shrestha1, Ali Qais Blebil1, Deepa Alex2, Mohamed Izham Mohamed Ibrahim3, Norhasimah Ismail4.
Abstract
Appropriate medication use is one of the most significant challenges among the older population. Although medication use problems are well documented at the secondary and tertiary health care level, the evidence at the primary care level of OECD region is limited. A narrative review of existing literature was conducted through a nonsystematic search for original articles through electronic search databases, Ovid Medline, Google Scholar from 2001 to 2021, and a combination of citation references. Medication use problems are prevalent in older adults at the primary care level. The main issues of medication use identified were as follows; nonadherence, adverse drug events, accessibility, polypharmacy, inappropriate medications, belief about medications, lack of knowledge and awareness, and lack of deprescribing. In addition, the current review has identified the possibilities of the problems: many medications, forgetfulness, lack of deprescribing, lack of communication, poor understanding, and limited awareness of inappropriate medications. This review found that various medication use problems subclusters were identified to impact the health care need among older adults. Therefore, effective interventions targeting these issues need to be developed to reduce medication use problems among older adults at a primary care level.Entities:
Keywords: medication use; narrative review; older adults; primary care
Year: 2022 PMID: 35783113 PMCID: PMC9245166 DOI: 10.1002/agm2.12203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Med (Milton) ISSN: 2475-0360
Summary of medication use problems among older adults at primary care
| Author, Year, Country | Settings | Methods | Participants | Issues of medication use problem | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al., | 15 general practices | Adherence to medication was measured by the medication possession ratio | 855 community‐dwelling patients aged ≥70 years | Medication nonadherence | 31% of older patients with multimorbidity were nonadherent to their medication |
| Jin et al., | 3 tertiary care hospitals, 6 community pharmacies, and 2 senior centers |
Cross‐sectional study Medication adherence was measured by the Adherence to Refills and Medication Scale | 160 participants aged 65 years and older | Medication nonadherence | 52.5% showed low adherence to medication. The factors affecting medication adherence included the patient's degree of satisfaction with the service (β = −0.215, |
| Gomes et al., | 38 public primary care centers | Cross sectional study, Questionnaire to assess medication adherence | 1089 polymedicated patients with ≥65 years old | Medication nonadherence | 47.7% were considered nonadherent. Forgetfulness (38.8%), difficulties in managing medication (14.3%), concerns with side effects (10.7%), and the price of medication (9.2%) were pointed as relevant medication nonadherence‐related factors |
| Notenboom et al., | A community pharmacy and a geriatric outpatient ward | Qualitative interview | 59 older adults | Lack of knowledge and awareness about medications | 63% participants reported problems with reading and understanding the instructions |
| Wucherer et al., | Primary care centre | Cross‐sectional study | 414 older patients aged 70 years and above | Medication nonadherence, Inappropriate medication |
Medication administration and nonadherence were 60%. Drug interactions were (17%), and inappropriate drug choice (15%) |
| Park et al., | One tertiary hospital and two private clinics |
Interview survey Morisky's self‐report | 265 older adults aged 65 years and above | Medication nonadherence | The medication adherence was significantly higher in tertiary hospital patients (61.1%) compared to private clinic patients (43.2%) |
| Field et al., | 18 Nursing homes which was served by a pharmacy which is within the community | Case–control study | 2916 nursing home residents | Adverse drug events | 410 residents had adverse drug events. A major risk factor for ADEs identified in our study was the number of regularly scheduled medications |
| Henriques et al., | Lisbon's Health Centre | Qualitative interview | 18 older adults aged above 65 years and above | Adverse drug event | Participants reported very few adverse effects |
| Padeiro | 801 community pharmacies at Lisbon Metropolitan Area | Descriptive spatial analysis | Older adults aged 65 years and above | Accessibility | 61.2% of the elderly live less than a 10 min walk from the nearest pharmacy and 76.9% live less than 15 min away |
| Gilliland et al., | Five sub‐LHIN areas | Population‐based study examining the geographical accessibility to all PCPs | All primary care providers within the city of London, Ontario | Accessibility | Access scores for French‐ and Arabic‐speaking PCPs are found comparatively high (mean = 2.85 and 1.01 respectively) as compared to Spanish‐speaking PCPs (mean = 0.47) |
| Nymberg et al., | 3 Primary health care centres | Qualitative interview | 15 older adults aged 65–80 years old | Accessibility | Most of the older adults raised concern towards accessibility to primary care |
| George et al., | Community‐dwelling older adults | Cross sectional study | 482 community dwelling adults age 65 years and older | Polypharmacy | The prevalence of polypharmacy defined as the use of 5 or more medications was 34% ( |
| Wastesson et al., | Pharmacies in Sweden | Longitudinal cohort study | 822,619 older adults aged more than 75 years | Polypharmacy | The prevalence of polypharmacy (more than 5 drugs) was 45% |
| Wastesson et al., | Pharmacies in Sweden | Longitudinal cohort study | 711,432 older adults (aged 65 years and older) living in Sweden with five or more prescription drugs | Polypharmacy | 82% were continuously exposed to polypharmacy for 6 months or longer, and 74% for 12 months or longer |
| Rieckert et al., | GPs in five study centres (UK/Manchester, Italy/Bolzano, Austria/Salzburg, Germany 1/Rostock, Germany 2/Witten) | Cross sectional study | Older adults aged 75 years and above and taking more than 8 medications | Polypharmacy | Age ≥85 years (OR 0.83; 95% CI 0.70–0.99) led to a significantly lower risk for excessive polypharmacy |
| Voigt et al., | Primary care centres | Mixed method Semi‐standardized content analysis of patients’ records, qualitative interviews with FPs and qualitative interviews with FPs’ medical assistants | 1241 older adults aged 65 years and above | Inappropriate medication | 23.9% of elderly patients received at least one PIM prescription |
| Denholm et al., | Primary care |
Retrospective cohort Number of medications and potentially inappropriate medication prescribed one year prior to, and including death, was ascertained | Older adults who had dementia and died | Inappropriate medication | One year prior to death, 50% of patients were prescribed a potentially inappropriate medication, falling to 41% at death |
| Akazawa et al., | Pharmacies | Retrospective cohort study | Elderly patients aged ≥65 years who had at least 2 pharmacy claims in separate months over a 1‐year period | Inappropriate medication | 43.6% of the older Japanese population had at least one inappropriate medicine in their prescription |
| Modig et al., | Primary care centres |
Cross sectional Medication knowledge was assessed with a questionnaire measuring knowledge about indication and possible adverse effects for each medicine. Belief about medicine questionnaire were used to assess attitude | 34 patients aged 65 years and above with multiple illnesses | Belief about medications, Lack of knowledge and awareness about medications |
93% of older adults indicated strong belief of the medication outweighs the cost as the difference between necessity score and concern score was positive. 84% did not have any knowledge about possible adverse effects for any of their prescribed medicine |
| Montiel‐Luque et al., | Primary care centers in the Costa del Sol Health District and North Ma'laga Health Area | Cross sectional | Older adults above 65 years who were using multiple medications | Polypharmacy | Patients who take a larger number of medicines reported the worst results in quality of life. Older adults did not know the indication of medication and the different brands |
| Schuling et al., | Department of General Practice of the University Medical Center Groningen | Qualitative interview | 54 GPs who treating older adults | Deprescribing | GPs feel forced by current guidelines to prescribe many different medicines and feels has less knowledge to deprescribe medications for older adults |
| Djatche et al., | Primary care in Parma, Italy |
Cross sectional Questionnaire were provided to assess perception of deprescribing and potential factors affecting the deprescribing process | 160 physicians treating elderly | Deprescribing |
72% reported general confidence in their ability to deprescribe. 45% physicians did not feel comfortable deprescribing. 40% of physicians reported hesitance in deprescribing medications prescribed by other prescriber before |