Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit

Objective: To establish the prevalence of potentially inappropriate medications prescribed for elderly patients, to identify the most commonly involved drugs, and to investigate whether age, sex and number of medications were related with the prescription of these drugs. Methods: Prescriptions for 1...

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Main Authors: Christine Grützmann Faustino, Milton de Arruda Martins, Wilson Jacob-Filho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert Einstein 2011-03-01
Series:Einstein (São Paulo)
Subjects:
Online Access:http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/1844-Einsteinv9n1_18-23_eng.pdf
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spelling doaj-60e9f280ce3140f88d4fae44767ddff92020-11-24T21:04:09ZengInstituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert EinsteinEinstein (São Paulo)1679-45082011-03-01911823Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unitChristine Grützmann FaustinoMilton de Arruda MartinsWilson Jacob-FilhoObjective: To establish the prevalence of potentially inappropriate medications prescribed for elderly patients, to identify the most commonly involved drugs, and to investigate whether age, sex and number of medications were related with the prescription of these drugs. Methods: Prescriptions for 1,800 elderly patients (≥ 60 years) were gathered from a database. These prescriptions were written by general physicians at a tertiary level university hospital in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, from February to May 2008. Only one prescription per patient was considered. The prescriptions were classified according to sex and age (60-69, 70-79 and ≥ 80). The Beers criteria (2003 version) were used to evaluate potentially inappropriate medications. Results: Most of the sample comprised women (66.6%) with a mean age of 71.3 years. The mean prevalence of potentially inappropriate medication prescriptions was 37.6%. The 60-69 age group presented the highest prevalence (49.9%). The most frequently prescribed potentially inappropriate medications to women were carisoprodol, amitriptyline, and fluoxetine; amitriptyline, carisoprodol, fluoxetine and clonidine were prescribed more often to men. The female sex (p<0.001; OR=2.0) and number of medications prescribed (p<0.001) were associated with prescription of potentially inappropriate medications. The chance of having a prescription of these drugs was lower among patients aged over 80 years (OR=0.7). The mean number of prescribed medications for both sexes and all age groups was 7.1. The mean number of medications per patient was higher among females (p<0.001); this result was not age-dependent (p=0.285). Conclusion: The prevalence of potentially inappropriate medications was similar to previously reported values in the literature and was correlated with the female sex. The chance of having a potentially inappropriate medication prescription was lower among patients aged over 80 years. The chance of having a potentially inappropriate medications prescription increased proportionally with the number of medications prescribed (≥ 5).http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/1844-Einsteinv9n1_18-23_eng.pdfAgedDrug prescriptionsPharmacoepidemiologyOutpatient clinicshospitalInternal medicine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christine Grützmann Faustino
Milton de Arruda Martins
Wilson Jacob-Filho
spellingShingle Christine Grützmann Faustino
Milton de Arruda Martins
Wilson Jacob-Filho
Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
Einstein (São Paulo)
Aged
Drug prescriptions
Pharmacoepidemiology
Outpatient clinics
hospital
Internal medicine
author_facet Christine Grützmann Faustino
Milton de Arruda Martins
Wilson Jacob-Filho
author_sort Christine Grützmann Faustino
title Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
title_short Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
title_full Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
title_fullStr Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
title_full_unstemmed Potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
title_sort potentially inappropriate medication prescribed to elderly outpatients at a general medicine unit
publisher Instituto Israelita de Ensino e Pesquisa Albert Einstein
series Einstein (São Paulo)
issn 1679-4508
publishDate 2011-03-01
description Objective: To establish the prevalence of potentially inappropriate medications prescribed for elderly patients, to identify the most commonly involved drugs, and to investigate whether age, sex and number of medications were related with the prescription of these drugs. Methods: Prescriptions for 1,800 elderly patients (≥ 60 years) were gathered from a database. These prescriptions were written by general physicians at a tertiary level university hospital in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, from February to May 2008. Only one prescription per patient was considered. The prescriptions were classified according to sex and age (60-69, 70-79 and ≥ 80). The Beers criteria (2003 version) were used to evaluate potentially inappropriate medications. Results: Most of the sample comprised women (66.6%) with a mean age of 71.3 years. The mean prevalence of potentially inappropriate medication prescriptions was 37.6%. The 60-69 age group presented the highest prevalence (49.9%). The most frequently prescribed potentially inappropriate medications to women were carisoprodol, amitriptyline, and fluoxetine; amitriptyline, carisoprodol, fluoxetine and clonidine were prescribed more often to men. The female sex (p<0.001; OR=2.0) and number of medications prescribed (p<0.001) were associated with prescription of potentially inappropriate medications. The chance of having a prescription of these drugs was lower among patients aged over 80 years (OR=0.7). The mean number of prescribed medications for both sexes and all age groups was 7.1. The mean number of medications per patient was higher among females (p<0.001); this result was not age-dependent (p=0.285). Conclusion: The prevalence of potentially inappropriate medications was similar to previously reported values in the literature and was correlated with the female sex. The chance of having a potentially inappropriate medication prescription was lower among patients aged over 80 years. The chance of having a potentially inappropriate medications prescription increased proportionally with the number of medications prescribed (≥ 5).
topic Aged
Drug prescriptions
Pharmacoepidemiology
Outpatient clinics
hospital
Internal medicine
url http://apps.einstein.br/revista/arquivos/PDF/1844-Einsteinv9n1_18-23_eng.pdf
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