Some Older ER Patients are getting the wrong
medicines
Newswise — A University of
Michigan study recently published in
Academic Emergency Medicine says that it is
common for patients 65 and older to receive
potentially inappropriate medications when
treated in an emergency room.
Nearly 19.5 million older
patients, or 16.8 percent of eligible
emergency visits from 2000-2006, received
one or more potentially inappropriate
medications – or PIMs. The large sample of
approximately 470,000 ED and outpatient
clinic visits, corresponding to a national
estimate of about 1.5 billion total visits,
allowed the researchers to determine the
extent of the problem nationwide.
“There are certain
medications that probably are not good to
give to older adults because the potential
benefits are outweighed by potential
problems,” says lead author, William J.
Meurer, M.D., M.S., assistant professor, U-M
Departments of Emergency Medicine and
Neurology.
Researchers looked at a
nationwide sample of emergency visits using
data from the National Hospital Ambulatory
Medical Care Survey, to see how many
patients aged 65 and older sent home from
the ED were prescribed potentially
inappropriate medications.
Ten medications accounted
for 86.5 percent of PIMs used in the ED. The
five most common ones were promethazine,
ketorolac, propoxyphene, meperidine, and
diphenhydramine; and two of these –
promethazine and ketorolac – accounted for
nearly 40%.
Meurer suggested that
further efforts are needed to educate
doctors about the suitability of certain
medications for older adults.
He also says the study
showed that prescribing inappropriate
medications was less likely to occur if a
resident or intern was involved in the
treatment, probably due to the fact that
younger doctors have had recent training
about medications.
There was substantial
regional and hospital type (teaching vs.
non-teaching) variability. PIMs were less
likely to occur in visits to hospitals in
the Northeast and twice as likely in other
parts of the country. And receiving a
potentially inappropriate medication was
more likely to occur at for-profit
hospitals.
The study did not explore
the possibility of medication interactions,
so it is possible that the potential harm by
medications is underestimated.
Meurer offers the
following advice to patients:
- Make sure you talk to
your primary care physician, either during
or after your ED visit.
- Know what medications
and supplements you are taking and make sure
the nurses and doctors at the ED know.
- Talk to the ED doctors
and nurses about how long the medicines they
have given you will affect you.
- Ask for a list of all
medications that you received while at the
ED before you leave the ED for home or to go
to a bed in the hospital. The list should
include information on the possible side
effects of those medicines.
- If you leave the ED and
then have an adverse event caused by
medication, contact your physician
immediately or go back to the emergency
department.
- Be proactive with your
pharmacy and make sure you understand what
you are taking.
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