Otago Daily Times

More care needed with meds: study

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

DOCTORS commonly prescribe medicines which potentiall­y harm their patients and need to take more care, new University of Otago research says.

A study of patients from 44 medical centres over a threeyear period revealed medication­related harm was mostly minor and considered not preventabl­e, but in nearly 20% of cases the harm was preventabl­e.

Of the 9076 randomly selected patients, three died due to the medicines they had taken and 18 were admitted to hospital.

The study, published in the British Journal of General Practice, said the elderly and people who were on multiple medication­s were most at risk.

‘‘These findings reinforce the need for vigilance and care in even routine medication use,’’ lead author Sharon Leitch, a senior lecturer in the Otago department of general practice and rural health, said.

Incidents uncovered by the research included a 10yearold boy who experience­d anorexia and poor weight gain due to prescripti­on medicine; a 93yearold man who repeatedly fell due to effects of his heart medication; and a 69yearold man who suffered fatal chronic renal failure after his medication dose was increased.

All those cases were regarded as potentiall­y preventabl­e.

Dr Leitch said while the data the study had analysed was from 201113, she believed there had not been substantia­l changes in prescribin­g patterns since then.

‘‘If anything, we know polypharma­cy [being prescribed multiple medication­s] and multiple morbiditie­s have increased in that time and the study might perhaps understate the amount of medication­related harm in New Zealand.

‘‘Doctors are aware of the issues. The question is: how can we prescribe safely and without causing harm?’’

It was not always possible to take patients off their medication but they needed to be aware of the potential risk, Dr Leitch said.

‘‘There are generation­al and cultural factors to consider — there are a lot of reasons why patients might not feel comfortabl­e questionin­g their doctors — but patients need to be aware that medication can have side effects and can be quite harmful.

‘‘Having said that, some people have very complicate­d health histories and really need those medication­s to stay alive. If it were straightfo­rward, I guess everybody would be doing it already.’’

The Southern District Health Board has been concerned about polypharma­cy for some time, and recently ran a campaign aimed at taking patients off prescripti­on drugs they might be taking unnecessar­ily.

WellSouth clinical pharmacist team leader Angela Renall said the study’s findings were similar to the experience of people who worked in general practice.

 ??  ?? Sharon Leitch
Sharon Leitch

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