AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study emphasizes the significance of rational medication use and prescription monitoring in elderly patients to reduce hospitalizations, medical costs, and mortality rates.
  • - It identified potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and potential prescription omissions (PPOs) using established criteria, revealing a PIM prevalence of 25.80% and a PPO prevalence of 41.72% among patients over 65 in rural Romania.
  • - The findings indicated that PPOs were more common than PIMs, suggesting that healthcare providers should prioritize careful medication management to enhance the health outcomes of the elderly in these areas.

Article Abstract

Background: Rational use of medications and monitoring of prescriptions in elderly patients is important to decrease the number and duration of hospitalizations, emergency medical consultations, mortality, as well as medical costs.

Purpose: To identify potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) and potential prescription omissions (PPOs), and determine their prevalence based on the Screening Tool of Older Persons' potentially inappropriate Prescriptions (STOPP) v2 criteria and Screening Tool to Alert doctors to Right Treatment (START) v2 criteria for patients aged >65 years.

Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in two rural counties in Romania based on electronic prescriptions for chronic conditions (EPCCs) issued from 30 days to 90 days by a specialist or general practitioner. Collected EPCCs were evaluated by an interdisciplinary team of specialists based on 26 STOPP v2 criteria and 10 START v2 criteria.

Results: PIM prevalence was 25.80% and PPO prevalence was 41.72% for 646 EPCCs. The mean age of patients was 75 years and the mean number of drugs per EPCC was four. The most frequently identified PIMs were treatment duration (6.65%), theophylline administration (5.72%), drug indication (4.64%), cyclo-oxygenase-2 non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (1.39%), and zopiclone prescription (0.77%). Statins (24.76%), beta-blockers (8.04%), and beta-2 agonist/antimuscarinic bronchodilators (5.88%) were the most frequently identified PPOs.

Conclusion: PPOs were more prevalent than PIMs for elderly populations living in the two rural counties in Romania we studied. Health practitioners (family physicians, specialists, and pharmacists) should focus on prophylactic and curative considerations when prescribing agents to decrease the morbidity and mortality of elderly rural Romanian patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7090181PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S233270DOI Listing

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