News
Preventative prescribing is risky in the very old
Preventative medicines “with unclear evidence of benefit” are commonly prescribed to 95-year-olds, a study from England reports.
Researchers assessed medical records for 27 men and 63 women aged 95 years. The study excluded OTC medications and certain prescription items such as vaccines and wound management, catheter and stoma products.
Participants received a mean of 7.4 prescribed medications.
Non-opioid analgesics (prescribed to 51 per cent of patients), statins (37 per cent), proton pump inhibitors (32 per cent), osmotic laxatives (31 per cent) and vitamin D with calcium (26 per cent) were the five most common drugs.
Commonly prescribed preventative medicines with unclear evidence of benefit included statins, aspirin (21 per cent of patients) and bisphosphonates (19 per cent).
The appropriateness of the medications for individual patients could not be assessed so “regular medication reviews may be important to ensure appropriate and safe prescribing” in very old people.
The data was collected during 2016 so some prescribing practices may be outdated. “As populations continue to age, clear practical guidelines are needed on prescribing preventative medications in the very old,” the authors say.
(International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy DOI:10.1007/s11096-022-01454-z)
Sponsored
Challenge your thinking on warts and verrucas
Discover different treatment options for warts and verruas and when to recommend them to your customers, based on their individual needs
7 steps to managing sore throat
Get to grips with what customers want from their sore throat treatment and upgrade your consultations with this 7-step guide
Record my learning outcomes