The Daily Courier

Some drugs weren’t meant to be taken forever

- DR. W. GIFFORD-JONES Visit Dr. Gifford-Jones’ website at docgiff.com, or contact him at: info@docgiff.com.

What will be your 2019 New Year’s resolution? Losing weight? Finally deciding to get off the couch and get more exercise? Hopefully to convince yourself smoking means 20 years less life?

These are all healthy ways to start the year. But I’d like to add another resolution.

Many North Americans are taking medicines for the long run when they’re only intended for the short run. This can have a huge impact on well-being.

The January Reports on Health claims that one-third of Americans over the age of 55 take too many medication­s. Michael Steinman, an expert on aging and professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, says, “Some medicine are more effective and safest when you use them for a specific and limited period of time.” So what are some of the major drugs being taken too long, and what can happen when they are?

Most readers don’t need Professor Steinman or me to tell them there’s a raging lethal epidemic of opioid drugs. Chad M. Brummett, associate professor of anesthesio­logy at the University of Michigan, says this addiction can happen in as little as seven days.

A study by Brummett, published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n Surgery, says, “six per cent of patients prescribed an opioid drug after surgery for minor procedures are still taking them six months later.”

And according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, taking an opioid for longer than three months increases addiction risk 15 times.

This informatio­n should be posted on the front door of every doctor’s office.

Patients should stop being wimps after minor surgery and use common sense about this potent painkiller.

Experts say opioids should be the last resort for chronic or minor pain, but if prescribed, it should be a low dose for a short period of time. And that doctors should suggest other pain options such as Advil, Motrin and Aleve.

It’s also hard to believe that 14 per cent of those between 65 to 80 years of age use either prescripti­on or over-the-counter sleeping aids.

Dr. Raj Dasgupta, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Southern California, reports these medication­s have greater effect on older people, making them more susceptibl­e to confusion and memory problems. They also double the risk of falls and hip fractures in the elderly.

Authoritie­s claim the better solution is referral to a sleep therapist.

This is easier said than done, as many communitie­s don’t have such caregivers to calm the mind.

And I’ve found in practice that sleep labs, even after numerous tests, still can’t solve this trouble. I’ve helped some patients by telling them to get up earlier in the morning, be active through the day and read a book until they fall asleep.

Society also needs a wakeup call when 17 million North Americans require daily heartburn drugs such as Nexium, Prevacid and Prilosec.

Dr. Nicholas Shaheen, chief of gastroente­rology at the University of North Carolina, reports “doctors start patients on these drugs and do not advise stopping them even when symptoms get better.”

Taking these drugs for a year or more increases the risk of heart attack, dementia and bone fractures.

Moreover, a study published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology in 2016, showed that patients on heartburn drugs for five years had a 28 per cent higher risk of developing chronic kidney disease.

The solution necessitat­es playing the same song over and over to get the message across. Namely, it’s prudent to take the lowest effective dose for the shortest period of time. This means tapering off slowly when symptoms subside. Or switch to a less potent drug at this time, such as Tums, Pepcid or Zantac.

Are you feeling congested and using an over-the-counter decongesta­nt spray? Sprays shrink nasal tissue quickly, and are less likely than oral decongesta­nts to increase blood pressure. But they should be used for only three days in a row. Studies show many people use them daily for a year. This can result in dependency on them which can also increase heart rate.

All the best for 2019 and remember that with drugs less is usually better.

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