The Guardian Australia

Australia’s health watchdog warns patients are being overprescr­ibed psychotrop­ic medication

- Natasha May Health reporter

Glenda Parkin was 56 when she was diagnosed with younger-onset dementia, a rare visual variant of Alzheimer’s disease known as posterior cortical atrophy. She became functional­ly blind and her ability to perceive the world around her gradually deteriorat­ed.

While the diagnosis forced Parkin to retire at the zenith of her career as a school principal in Perth, losing her abilities to read and write alongside other basic capabiliti­es, she carried on a fulfilling life, according to her husband, Bronte, her carer for 10 years.

The couple travelled together, with Glenda “effectivel­y seeing the world through my eyes”, he said. She continued to pursue her love of music as a member of a community choir and took on new challenges, becoming a dementia advocate.

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However, Glenda’s quality of life took a turn for the worse when in 2020 the couple sought their medical team’s help for Glenda’s changing behaviour and sleeplessn­ess. She was prescribed quetiapine, an antipsycho­tic medicine.

The previous year she had also been prescribed a sedative, lorazepam, to treat anxiety, agitation, restlessne­ss, aggression and occasional­ly delusional behaviour – common in people with dementia.

Not long after starting on quetiapine, Glenda began to experience unusual muscular movements in her legs and lose her balance. One evening as Bronte was cooking, she toppled over on the hard timber floor of their home, fracturing her pelvic bones.

“It was only in the hospital we found out that the leg movements were caused by the medicines,” Bronte said.

The hospital psychiatri­st explained that Glenda’s leg movement disorder was a side-effect of the quetiapine – something that had not been discussed as a risk when it was prescribed – and he recommende­d that both medication­s be slowly phased out.

Although her pelvic bones eventually healed, Glenda never regained the ability to walk, making it impossible for Bronte to care for her in their home. She was admitted to an aged care home where for the first six months she was confined to bed 24 hours a day because

putting her into a nursing chair was too risky. She remained there until she died in 2023.

‘A new standard’

The Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care is warning people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, autism, dementia and other neurodevel­opmental conditions are being overprescr­ibed psychotrop­ic medicines to manage behavioura­l issues.

The chief medical officer for the commission, Dr Carolyn Hullick, said there was limited evidence they were effective for behavioura­l issues in people with cognitive disability or impairment. What was known is that they increase the risk of falls, stroke and death, she said.

A new national standard to be released Thursday stresses that those prescribin­g such drugs must first consider non-medication options.

Hullick said the impetus for the new standard was that both royal commission­s into disability and aged care highlighte­d “there was a fundamenta­l problem with the way we were using medication to restrict people and to control their behaviour, rather than using the medication­s appropriat­ely for management of symptoms and disease”.

“Whether you’re a child or whether you are a 95-year-old, the principles should be the same,” Hullick said.

Psychotrop­ic medicines include antidepres­sants, anxiolytic/hypnotics and antipsycho­tics. There has been a 60% increase in their prescripti­on for all Australian­s over the past three decades. About a third of people with intellectu­al disability are prescribed psychotrop­ics and 61% of people given at least one in their first three months in residentia­l aged care.

The new standard emphasises that health profession­als must develop individual­ly tailored non-medication interventi­ons and only use psychotrop­ic medicines as a last resort.

In cases where doctors do prescribe them they must ensure there is informed consent, with patients and carers provided comprehens­ive informatio­n about the purpose, benefits and risks.

Prof Eddy Strivens, a geriatrici­an and clinical director of the Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service, said the standard would encourage health profession­als to find out the reasons behind someone’s behaviour, which is often their way of communicat­ing an unmet need.

 ?? ?? Glenda Parkin was diagnosed at the age of 56 with younger-onset dementia and prescribed psychotrop­ic medication­s. Photograph: Bronte Parkin
Glenda Parkin was diagnosed at the age of 56 with younger-onset dementia and prescribed psychotrop­ic medication­s. Photograph: Bronte Parkin
 ?? ?? Glenda Parkin with her husband, Bronte Parkin. Photograph: Bronte Parkin
Glenda Parkin with her husband, Bronte Parkin. Photograph: Bronte Parkin

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