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> " HSI - Jenny Thompson "

> <HSIResearch

 

> Cold Beers

> Wed, 18 Aug 2004 10:00:37 -0400

>

> Cold Beers

>

> Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

>

> August 18, 2004

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> Dear Reader,

>

> There's no other way to put it: Far too many doctors

> are letting

> seniors down.

>

> A new study from Duke University reveals disturbing

> evidence that more

> than 20 percent of all seniors who are prescribed

> drugs are receiving

> medications that are known to be harmful to older

> patients.

>

> This lapse in " care-giving " is nothing less than

> shameful. But it

> serves as a stark warning: No one should meekly

> accept what a doctor

> prescribes. Ask questions. Research. Take control of

> your health care.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> Slipping through the cracks

>

---------------------------

>

>

> In the early 90s, Mark Beers, M.D., and several

> other specialists in

> geriatric drug therapy, developed a list of

> medications that were

> inappropriate for nursing home residents. The list –

> now known as the

> Beers List – was amended in 1997, and updated in

> 2003, and has become

> a well known tool for guiding doctors away from

> prescribing

> medications that may be harmful when taken by older

> patients.

>

> In an interview with HealthDayNews, Dr. Kevin

> Schulman, a professor of

> internal medicine at Duke University and one of the

> authors of the

> study, said that even though someone over the age of

> 65 may be in good

> health, their kidneys don't function as well as they

> did when they

> were younger. This is one of the primary reasons

> that some medications

> can be harmful. Antidepressants and muscle relaxants

> can put

> particular stress on the kidneys.

>

> The Duke team examined the outpatient prescription

> claims for more

> than 765,000 people aged 65 or older who had more

> than one

> prescription filled during 1999. Using the Beers

> List, the researchers

> produced this data:

>

>

> * More than 20 percent of patients over the age of

> 65 may be taking

> inappropriate prescription drugs

> * More than 15 percent of these patients received

> prescriptions for

> two or more of the drugs on the Beers List

> * Four percent of the patients were prescribed three

> or more drugs on

> the list

> * Psychotropic drugs (such as antidepressants) on

> the Beers List were

> prescribed the most, totaling more than 40 percent

> of the

> prescriptions

> * Muscle relaxants on the Beers List were the second

> most commonly

> prescribed

>

> Obviously, there are quite a few doctors out there

> who are asleep at

> the switch. And as a result, their patients may be

> suffering.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> Adding up the danger

>

---------------------------

>

>

> Kidney stress caused by drugs on the Beers List is

> by no means the

> only health problem older people face when filling

> prescriptions.

>

> In the September 1999 HSI Members Alert, we told you

> how drugs can

> interfere with the absorption of nutrients. For

> instance, acid

> blockers (such as Prilosec and Nexium) have been

> shown to

> significantly decrease absorption of vitamin B-12;

> one of the primary

> vitamins needed to prevent anemia.

>

> Other medications that are known to play a role in

> nutrient depletion

> are among the most frequently prescribed drugs on

> the market.

> Antibiotics, anti-depressants, anti-inflammatories,

> blood pressure

> medications, cholesterol-lowering drugs, estrogen,

> and tranquilizers

> can all strip valuable vitamins and minerals from

> the body. When two

> or more of these drugs are combined - especially in

> an older patient -

> the risk of developing anemia rises.

>

> And that's when things can get really complicated,

> because anemia

> dramatically increases mortality risk for patients

> with chronic health

> problems such as heart disease and cancer.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> How much can you take?

>

---------------------------

>

>

> The harm that a single drug may do – by stressing

> the kidneys and

> depleting nutrients – is small compared to the harm

> that can occur

> when several drugs are taken at the same time.

>

> In the e-Alert " Iron in the Fire " (6/3/03), I told

> you about a study

> conducted by Medco Health Solutions, Inc. (a company

> that manages drug

> benefit plans). Researchers concluded with this

> shocking statistic:

> the average senior receives 25 prescriptions

> annually - a 100 percent

> jump from just five years ago!

>

> As the over-medication of seniors grows at an

> alarming rate, we see

> two serious problems becoming even greater health

> threats: 1) the

> wider variety of drug intake creates conflicting

> side effects (and as

> we've seen before, many doctors treat drug side

> effects with

> additional drugs), and 2) these potent drug mixes

> rob patients of the

> very nutrients they need most when fighting an

> illness.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> New coin

>

---------------------------

>

>

> A few days ago I came across a word that was new to

> me: Polypharmacy.

> This is the practice of prescribing too many

> medications.

>

> Along with polypharmacy I would coin this word:

> Negligentpharmacy; the

> practice of prescribing drugs that are known to be

> harmful to certain

> patients.

>

> Unfortunately, many older people are victims of both

> polypharmacy and

> negligentpharmacy because too many doctors are not

> well trained or

> conscientious enough to know the harm that some

> drugs may cause.

> That's why young and old patients alike have to be

> diligent whenever

> their doctor writes a prescription.

>

> Ask questions. Research. Take control of your health

> care.

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> ...and another thing

>

> For some of us, antidepressant drugs are only as far

> away as our

> kitchen faucet.

>

> You may have heard about the recent report from the

> UK that traces of

> Prozac have been found in the drinking water there.

> Needless to say,

> British environmentalists are nearly apoplectic, as

> well they should

> be.

>

> Apparently Prozac finds its way into the water

> system by way of

> treated sewage water. Or you might call it

> not-treated-enough sewage

> water. But whatever you call it, there's no getting

> around the fact

> that Prozac in tap water has already been ingested

> and digested by

> someone else.

>

> Not exactly what you would call " jolly good! "

>

> According to the BBC, a Drinking Water Inspectorate

> spokesman said

> that the Prozac was " most likely highly diluted. "

> Wow... " Most

> likely. " THAT'S reassuring!

>

> One of the disturbing aspects of this very

> disturbing situation, is

> the fact that Prozac is one of the drugs that

> appears on the Beers

> List. So whether they want to or not, elderly people

> in Britain may be

> picking up a little Prozac in their afternoon tea.

>

> Meanwhile, back here in the U.S., we've had Prozac

> in our waterways

> for months already.

>

> In the e-Alert " Air Freshener " (11/5/03), I told you

> about Bryan

> Brooks, a Baylor University toxicologist, who

> discovered traces of

> Prozac's active ingredient (fluoxetine) in the

> tissue of blue gill

> fish in a lake in Dallas, Texas. Brooks speculated

> that the fluoxetine

> made its way from the urine of Prozac users, through

> a water treatment

> plant, and into the lake.

>

> So there's your proof – from England to east Texas –

> what goes around

> comes around.

>

> Over the past few years, worldwide sales of Prozac

> have totaled well

> over $2 billion per year. I think I'll have the

> distilled water,

> please.

>

> To Your Good Health,

>

> Jenny Thompson

> Health Sciences Institute

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> Sources:

>

> " Inappropriate Prescribing for Elderly Americans in

> a Large Outpatient

> Population " Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 164,

> No. 15, August

> 2004, arcinte.ama-assn.org

> " Many Older Patients on Risky Drugs " Steven

> Reinberg, HealthDayNews,

> 8/9/04, story.news.

> " Updating the Beers Criteria for Potentially

> Inappropriate Medication

> Use in Older Adults: Results of a US Consensus Panel

> of Experts "

> Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 163, No. 22,

> December 2003,

> ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

> " New Data Uncovers Medication Matrix: Multiple

> Physicians, Pharmacies

> and Drugs Over-Medicate Seniors; Drive Higher Costs "

> Press Release,

> Medco Health Solutions, Inc., 5/21/03,

> businesswire.com

> " Prozac 'Found in Drinking Water' " BBC News, 8/8/04,

> news.bbc.co.uk

> " Fish on Prozac? How Depressing! " MSNBC, 10/23/03,

> msnbc.com

>

> Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com,

> L.L.C. The e-Alert may

> not be posted on commercial sites without written

> permission.

>

>

************************************************************

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