The Daily Courier

Opioids big problem for seniors

- By SHERYL UBELACKER

Older adults taking the narcotics at risk for toxicity or death

TORONTO — When most people think about opioid overdoses, it’s typically a younger person that comes to mind. But it’s often older Canadians who bear the brunt of detrimenta­l effects related to the powerful narcotics.

In fact, about 30 per cent of all opioid-related deaths in Canada in 2017 occurred among those aged 50 and older, while adults 65-plus had the highest rates of hospitaliz­ation due to toxicity from the painkiller­s, says a report by the National Initiative for the Care of the Elderly (NICE), released Wednesday in Ottawa.

“The attention seems to be on the younger population, whereas the data suggest that it’s older adults who are just as — if not more — adversely affected in this opiate crisis,” said geriatric addiction specialist Marilyn White-Campbell, who collaborat­ed on the study.

“And that’s where there’s this idea of the invisible epidemic, because it’s not really seen as an older person's problem.”

Adults aged 65-plus consistent­ly have the highest rates of hospitaliz­ation due to opioid poisoning, the report found. While older adults represente­d 16 per cent of the population in 2014-2015, they accounted for about 25 per cent of all hospital admissions due to opioid toxicity.

Hospital stays for opioid poisoning were also more prolonged for those aged 50 and up — eight days longer on average — compared with those in other age brackets, says the report, which was compiled following an in-depth review of research on the topic.

Accidental opioid toxicity that occurred as a result of treatment with prescribed opioids, such as morphine, hydromorph­one and the fentanyl patch, accounted for a quarter of poisonings among older Canadians.

But White-Campbell believes the actual figure may be higher.

“Is the person coming to the hospital because they’ve had a fall and a fracture or are they coming in because of an opiate poisoning?” she said. Older people who take the painkiller­s are known to have a greater risk for falls due to the drugs’ effects on balance and cognition.

Dr. Samir Sinha, director of geriatrics at Sinai Health Systems and the University Health Network in Toronto, said older Canadians are prescribed opioids more often than their younger counterpar­ts because they have more pain-causing health conditions, such as chronic arthritis.

But because there are changes in how the body metabolize­s medication­s as a person ages, tolerance for drugs decline.

“We break down medication­s more slowly as we get older and our livers age,” he said. “That means the same dose of opioids that might have worked for you when you were 50 might actually be toxic when you're 60.

Citing 2017 statistics, the report showed 92 per cent of opioid-related deaths across all ages were deemed to be accidental. But among deaths in which medical examiners determined the drugs had been deliberate­ly ingested with the intent to die, a high percentage of fatalities occurred among those aged 50 and older.

“While most opioid poisonings among seniors are accidental, an alarming 33 per cent overall were intentiona­l, raising concerns about the role of mental health and suicide prevention in limiting opioid deaths,” the authors write.

The report makes recommenda­tions for stemming the tide of adverse events in older people caused by opioid use, including:

— Enhanced opioid prescribin­g education for health-care providers to avoid both overtreatm­ent and under-treatment of pain.

— Prescripti­on drug-monitoring programs, with data-sharing across jurisdicti­ons, to alert prescriber­s and pharmacies of potential cases of drug interactio­ns, multiple prescripti­ons and misuse.

— Age- and gender-appropriat­e treatment approaches, such as methadone maintenanc­e therapy for those with opioid use disorder, including investment in training for practition­ers working with geriatric patients.

— Legislativ­e changes, including a national opioid strategy that expands access to substance-abuse treatment programs and rescue drugs like naloxone, to counter opioid drug overdoses in older adults.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? While society focuses on the growing problem of opioid deaths among the young, it is often seniors who bear the brunt of detrimenta­l effects related to the powerful narcotics.
The Canadian Press While society focuses on the growing problem of opioid deaths among the young, it is often seniors who bear the brunt of detrimenta­l effects related to the powerful narcotics.

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