Scottish Daily Mail

Doctors are ‘too scared to take patients off drugs’

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

DOCTORS are prescribin­g too many drugs because they are scared they might be sued if they advise patients to stop taking them, it was claimed yesterday.

Professor Simon Maxwell, from the University of Edinburgh, said Britain has reached a ‘tipping point’ where many elderly people are taking five or more drugs – when they often do not need to.

He insisted that life- saving drugs are only a ‘minuscule’ proportion of the vast array of expensive tablets being prescribed, which often carry the risk of side-effects.

And he warned of the ‘subtle’ psychologi­cal impact that taking a large array of medicines for years on end can have on elderly patients.

Speaking at the Cheltenham Science Festival, Professor Maxwell explained: ‘It’s easy to think drugs are being given for serious conditions for an infection that might kill you.

‘But that accounts for a minuscule proportion of prescripti­ons written. Many prescripti­ons are produced to reduce the risk of something happening in the future or only give a shortterm benefit.’

He said that GPs needed to review their patients’ medication­s more often, and carry out controlled trials

‘We are at a tipping point’

to see what happens when certain drugs are withdrawn.

But he revealed that many medics are reluctant to take patients off their pills in case they are found ‘culpable’.

He added: ‘All members of the medical profession want to do their best for patients and we don’t want to get sued.’

Professor Maxwell went on to say: ‘We are at a tipping point, we’ve got so many people on so many medicines, a billion prescripti­ons in England and Wales each year.

‘ The average GP writes 45,000 prescripti­ons each year. That is a lot of medicines being prescribed by any standards.’

One patient he discussed was an 83year-old woman called Mabel who had been told to take an astonishin­g 18 different drugs.

And he explained that certain drugs – for example statins – were being prescribed to prevent future illnesses, and tended to have only a marginal benefit for the patient.

He believes many people might consider that the small odds of the medicine actually helping them would be outweighed by the downsides of being on long-term medication.

However once a patient is prescribed a medicine, he said it is ‘like a train that does not stop’.

Professor Maxwell went on to say: ‘If I get to 95 I don’t want a statin anywhere near me. Are we overmedica­ted? For some patients, yes...there are some patients on more medicines than they clearly wish to be on if they were better informed.’

While many patients will feel unqualifie­d to assess the risks of stopping their medicines, Professor Maxwell said he was hopeful that a new generation of patients who are ‘ internet savvy’ might be better informed. He also called for more ‘ patient advocates’ who could help patients make decisions about their drugs.

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