Literature DB >> 9154361

Medication use and rural seniors. Who really knows what they are taking?

S J Torrible1, D B Hogan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether listings of current medications obtained from the office file of patients' attending physicians and the pharmacy record of patients' dispensing pharmacists corresponded to the actual use of medications in a group of non-institutionalized seniors residing in rural communities.
DESIGN: In-home interviews followed by retrospective office chart and pharmacy database reviews.
SETTING: Two rural communities in southern Alberta with populations of less than 7000 people. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-five patients aged 75 years or older residing in the study communities, eight family physicians, and four dispensing pharmacies. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of currently consumed prescription drugs, currently consumed over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, and stored or discontinued prescribed medications; knowledge of medications (prescribed, OTC, and stored) by family physicians and pharmacists; and number of prescribers or dispensing pharmacists.
RESULTS: Patients took a mean of 56 prescribed medications, took a mean of 3.5 OTC medications, and had a mean of 2.0 stored or discontinued medications. Attending family physicians and primary dispensing pharmacists typically knew of only some of their patients' entire regimen of medications.
CONCLUSIONS: Misinformation about medication consumption by seniors was common among health care providers. Undertaking routine medication reviews (with emphasis on OTC use), asking specific questions about actual consumption, encouraging use of one prescriber and one pharmacist, discouraging storage of discontinued medications and reducing use of medication samples should be of benefit.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9154361      PMCID: PMC2255534     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can Fam Physician        ISSN: 0008-350X            Impact factor:   3.275


  16 in total

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2.  How often is medication taken as prescribed? A novel assessment technique.

Authors:  J A Cramer; R H Mattson; M L Prevey; R D Scheyer; V L Ouellette
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Review 3.  Medicine taking by people aged 65 or more.

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5.  Drug compliance and unreported drugs in the elderly.

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6.  Acute effects of sertraline, amitriptyline, and placebo on the psychomotor performance of healthy subjects over 50 years of age.

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7.  Risk factors in geriatric drug prescribing. A practical guide to avoiding problems.

Authors:  M H Beers; J G Ouslander
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8.  Adverse drug reactions associated with global cognitive impairment in elderly persons.

Authors:  E B Larson; W A Kukull; D Buchner; B V Reifler
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9.  Drug-induced illness as a cause for admission to a community hospital.

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10.  Do too many cooks spoil the broth? Multiple physician involvement in medical management of elderly patients and potentially inappropriate drug combinations.

Authors:  R M Tamblyn; P J McLeod; M Abrahamowicz; R Laprise
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5.  What drugs are our frail elderly patients taking? Do drugs they take or fail to take put them at increased risk of interactions and inappropriate medication use?

Authors:  C Frank; M Godwin; S Verma; A Kelly; A Birenbaum; R Seguin; J Anderson
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Review 6.  Epidemiology of over-the-counter drug use in community dwelling elderly: United States perspective.

Authors:  J T Hanlon; G G Fillenbaum; C M Ruby; S Gray; A Bohannon
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7.  Physicians' and pharmacies' overview of patients' medication. An analysis of fidelity coefficients.

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8.  Prescribing patterns and safety of mezclitas for respiratory illnesses.

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