Too Many Meds May Be More Problem Than Cure
With people taking growing numbers of drugs, risks are multiplying, experts warn.
THURSDAY, November. 3, 2011— Just about a week
goes by, it seems, without some company announcing a new pill designed to help
you live a longer, healthier life.
Medication can, certainly, do a lot toward curing,
preventing or easing many sickness. But taking a fistful of pills each day
creates its own set of medical threats, prompting concern among a growing
number of physicians and pharmacists that people are simply taking too many
medications for their own good.
It's a concept called polypharmacy, the use of more
medications than someone actually needs. And that means not just prescription
drugs but also over-the-counter medications and dietary supplements.
"As you keep increasing the amount of prescriptions,
that increases the chance of having a drug interaction or major side
effect," said Sophia De Monte, a pharmacist in Nesconset, N.Y., and a
spokeswoman for the American Pharmacists Association. "It's exponential.
The more you add on, the more chance you'll have something bad happen."
The average American is prescribed medication about thirteen
times a year, according to a report last year by the chui Family Foundation. But
the likelihood of polypharmacy increases as people age. Studies have found that
seniors make up thirteen percent of the population but account for thirty
percent of all drug prescriptions. When elderly patients transfer from
hospitals to nursing homes for rehabilitation, it is common for caregivers to
have to keep track of nine or more prescribed medications for each person,
according to a long-term care report.
The more medications people take, the more likely it is that
they'll experience a problem in three key areas, said De Monte and Norman P.
Tomaka, a pharmacist in Melbourne, Fla., including:
Drug compliance. Trying to keep track of
multiple medications can become too much of a burden, causing people to give up
trying to comply with the directions for medicine use. "We've found that
compliance drops forty percent when you add a second drug to a patient's
regimen, even if they are both once a day," Tomaka said. A lack of
compliance to prescription directions can create a serious health risk.
"For example, if you use blood pressure medication sporadically, you may
set your blood pressure up to become drug resistant," he said. Sporadic
use of antibiotics can cause infectious bacteria to develop resistance to
medications.
Drug interactions. Drugs can work against each
other in strange ways, and the more medications added to a daily schedule, the
greater the risk for an interaction that could affect the person's health.
Side effects. Every medication a person takes
comes with its own risk for side effects. Multiple prescriptions and remedies
mean a multiplied risk. And once side effects occur, it can be more difficult
to track down the problem. "Sometimes those drugs can mask each other’s'
symptoms," Tomaka said. "If you get an adverse reaction, you don't
know which one caused it. Then you have a quandary."
But though the trend has been toward more
prescriptions, steps are being taken to safeguard patients' health.
Doctors and pharmacists are working together to create
systems by which patients' treatment lists are reviewed, with an eye toward
minimizing the medications they take, De Monte said.
"The history of HIV treatment is a good lesson in this," he said.
"In the 1990s, most AIDS patients took anywhere from six to 24 medication
tablets. Sometimes there would be as many as 65. Today, it's thoroughly
realistic that a patient will only have to take two pills a day."
In the meantime, De Monte and Tomaka suggested a few steps
people can take to make sure the multiple medications they are on don't cause
more problems than they cure:
"The whole goal is to try to fine-tune it," she
said, "working with the patient to get the best medication with the best
effects at the minimal amount."
Researchers also are working on ways to combine drugs that
work well together into a single dose, reducing the number of pills people have
to keep track of as well as the risk for drug interactions, Tomaka said.
In the end, dealing with polypharmacy entails some
work on the part of patients because only they know about their specific health
condition and how each medication makes them feel. But though the trend
has been toward more prescriptions, steps are being taken to safeguard
patients' health.
Take each medication with water. If you add an acidic
beverage, like fruit juice or soda, to the mix, it's just one more thing for
your medication to interact with.
Read all the information provided about any medication,
either prescription or over-the-counter, looking for potential problems that
might crop up for you.
Review your medication list with your doctor and pharmacist.
Report symptoms that occur once you begin taking a new
medication.
"Medications are tools," Tomaka said. "We have
to get away from looking at drugs as anything other than a tool used to help
repair a patient's body. The key is working with your physician on your
specific condition and realizing that one size does not fit all."
But too many meds may be better than meds shortage.
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