Dementia patients who get prescriptions from
multiple health systems may face a higher risk of drug mix-ups or unsafe
interactions than people with cognitive problems who get all their medications
from one place, a study of U.S. veterans suggests.
Researchers examined data on more than 75,000
veterans with dementia and found that among patients who received all of their
care at Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities, 39 percent had
potential safety issues with prescribed medications.
Among those who got some care at the VA and some
treatment elsewhere, however, 59 percent had possible drug safety issues, the
study found.
"Generally speaking, older adults are at
greater risk of having adverse drug events," said lead study author Joshua
Thorpe, a researcher at the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System. "These risks
are exacerbated in persons with dementia."
The average dementia patient has four other chronic
health conditions and receives care from five different providers in a typical
year, researchers note in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
All of these medical conditions come with
prescriptions - at least five different drugs for a typical dementia patient
and up to nine or more different medicines for 16 percent of these patients,
the authors write.
Federal policy shifts over the past decade have
made it easier for elderly veterans to access care outside the VA and get
prescriptions from doctors working for other health systems. Most recently, the
Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act expanded access to non-VA
facilities to veterans who couldn't get seen within 30 days or who lived more
than 40 miles from the nearest VA providers.
To see how expanded access to care outside the VA
might influence medication safety for veterans with dementia, researchers
studied patients who qualified for care through the VA as well as through the
Medicare Part D drug benefit.
Overall, 44 percent of the patients in the study
had prescriptions that carried risks for dementia patients, either when taken
alone or when used in combination with other drugs patients got at the same
time.
Veterans using the VA as well as other health
systems had more than double the risk of being exposed to powerful
"anticholinergic" medications - drugs that make dementia drugs less
effective and increase the risk of memory problems, dizziness and falls.
Dementia patients with prescriptions from inside
and outside the VA system were also more likely to receive antipsychotics,
which are known to increase mortality in people with dementia.
One limitation of the study is that researchers
lacked data on over-the-counter medications, which can also pose safety issues
when taken by dementia patients or mixed with other drugs.
Still, the authors suggest a policy fix -
implementing electronic health information exchanges and medication therapy
management services that can connect data from the VA to other health systems.
The study highlights one way that efforts to
increase access and choice may boost the risk of unintended drug safety issues,
Dr. David Gifford, a researcher at Brown University in Providence, Rhode
Island, writes in an accompanying editorial.
"We have known for a while that making sure we
know the medications a person is currently taking compared to what they used to
be taking when they transition between providers such as being discharged from
a hospital to the community is an important task to prevent medication related
errors," Gifford said by email.
"We also have known that the lack of
information on a person's medication and allergies at the time of being
prescribed new medications can increase the risk of receiving medications that
may cause an adverse event or interact with other medications," Gifford
added.
The best thing patients and families can do is carry a list of every
prescription and over-the-counter medication or supplement they take - and show
it to every new provider or pharmacist they see, Gifford said.
SOURCE:Reuters, Fox News
So this is quite worrying to hear and makes you wonder how the health providers can possibly keep track of patients medications when they is clearly some crossover of provider. The very nature of their illness makes it likely that they wont know themselves what their prescription is for. The veterans taking antipsychotics and dementia medication are already vulnerable people.
So this is quite worrying to hear and makes you wonder how the health providers can possibly keep track of patients medications when they is clearly some crossover of provider. The very nature of their illness makes it likely that they wont know themselves what their prescription is for. The veterans taking antipsychotics and dementia medication are already vulnerable people.
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