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A prescription to improve drug-related health

Concordia researcher James Conklin is co-leading a team developing guidelines to reduce medication use in the elderly
December 10, 2015
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By Cléa Desjardins


“I hope the guidelines will help improve the confidence of clinicians in tapering or stopping medications,” says James Conklin “I hope the guidelines will help improve the confidence of clinicians in tapering or stopping medications.”


We’re not getting any younger. According to Statistics Canada, close to one in four Canadians will be 65 or older by 2030.

Advancing age leads to more medical problems. It’s not uncommon to see seniors suffering from a host of ailments — and using a range of drugs to deal with them. Approximately two thirds of seniors in Canada regularly take five or more prescription medications.

While this “polypharmacy” approach might help cure some problems, it can often lead to others, such as an increased risk of falls, hospitalization, institutionalization and mortality.

A group of researchers — led by James Conklin, an associate professor in Concordia’s Department of Applied Human Sciences, and Barbara Farrell of the Bruyère Research Institute and Department of Family Medicine at the University of Ottawa — is working to reverse the trend through a new project, "Deprescribing Guidelines for the Elderly."

Funded by the Government of Ontario through OPEN — Ontario Pharmacy Research Collaboration — the project aims to develop and evaluate guidelines to support health-care professionals in tapering or stopping medications in elderly patients, while monitoring for withdrawal reactions. 

“Polypharmacy among the elderly is such a difficult problem in Canada, with significant impacts upon both quality of life and health-system costs. As life changes, medications that were once right for a person may no longer be the best choice for them,” says Conklin.

For the project, Conklin and his colleagues examined three commonly used classes of drugs:

  1. Proton pump inhibitors — they reduce acid production in the stomach, commonly used to treat heartburn.
  2. Benzodiazepine receptor agonists — they cause sedation, commonly used for insomnia.
  3. Antipsychotics — they cause sedation, commonly used for behavioural symptoms of dementia and sometimes for insomnia.


For each drug class, the team developed evidence-based guidelines along with decision-aid algorithms, which provide advice for primary care clinicians, and those who practice at long-term care facilities.

They use the algorithms to help reduce medications that may be causing problems or are no longer needed for their patients.

The researchers have implemented the algorithms in three Family Health teams and three long-term care homes in eastern Ontario.

“My hope is that the guidelines and algorithms we develop will help improve the medication-related health of seniors,” says Conklin.

“Fewer medications taken mean fewer adverse drug reactions. At the same time, I hope that having set guidelines will help improve the confidence of clinicians in tapering or stopping medications, while supporting a cultural shift in health care toward reassessing medication use as people age.”


Find out more about the "Deprescribing Guidelines for the Elderly" project.

 



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