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Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1992

Nocturia: A Risk Factor for Falls in the Elderly

Ronald B. Stewart; Mary T. Moore; Franklin E. May; Ronald G. Marks; William E. Hale

Objective: To determine if nocturia is a risk factor for reported falls and bone fractures in older persons.


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1972

A review of medication errors and compliance in ambulant patients

Ronald B. Stewart; Leighton E. Cluff

One assumes that patients will follow the physicians directions and benefit from his diagnostic and therapeutic acumen. While these assumptions seem reasonable, prospective studies have indicated that patients frequently do not comply with the physicians directions. These studies have disclosed an alarming rate of medication errors and noncompliance with regard to drug taking by patient populations. This paper reviews studies conducted to determine medication errors and compliance in ambulant populations. The study of medication errors and compliance in outpatients is difficult. However, the desire of health professionals to have follow-up information has led to several investigations in the past 2 decades.


Drugs & Aging | 1994

Polypharmacy in the Aged

Ronald B. Stewart; James W. Cooper

SummaryElderly patients use more medications than younger patients and the trend of increasing drug use continues through 80 years of age. Studies conducted in a variety of settings have shown that patients over 65 years of age use an average of 2 to 6 prescribed medications and 1 to 3.4 nonprescribed medications.Success of pharmaceutical and medical research has resulted in an abundance of effective drugs to treat acute and chronic conditions. Most research resulting in the development and marketing of these medications has been directed at proving the efficacy and safety of single drug products. Little research has been directed to determine the safety and efficacy of combining multiple medications to treat concurrent conditions in a single patient. It is known that the use of multiple medications increases the risks of adverse drug reactions, drug-drug interactions, and makes compliance with medication regimens more difficult.Numerous studies have been conducted to better understand factors that are associated with increased drug use in elderly people. Studies also have been conducted to identify interventions that can improve drug treatment for the elderly, and reduce polypharmacy.Multiple drug use is common in older people, and may give rise to drug related problems. Methods to reduce the risks of polypharmacy include patient education, physician education, such as education and feedback systems, and regulatory intervention. Continual drug and disease monitoring is essential.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1986

Symptom prevalence in the elderly. An evaluation of age, sex, disease, and medication use.

William E. Hale; Laura L. Perkins; Franklin E. May; Ronald G. Marks; Ronald B. Stewart

Prevalence of reported symptoms was studied in 1927 women and 1140 men over 65 years of age in an ambulatory health screening program. Reports of 28 common symptoms were obtained from a standardized questionnaire completed by participants at the time of their fourth annual visit to the program. A comparison was made of the prevalence of specific symptoms by sex, age, disease states, and drug use patterns. The most common symptoms reported by women were nocturia (80.4%), swollen feet or ankles (30.5%), cold feet and/or legs (28.6%), and irregular heartbeat (23.2%), whereas men complained most often of nocturia (79.8%), irregular heartbeat (24.8%), cold feet and/or legs (23.6%), and tinnitus (23.1%). Women reported a mean of 3.99 symptoms compared with 3.22 reported by men (P < .0001). In women there was a statistically significant association for most symptoms in subjects reporting the use of medication compared with a group who did not use medication. In men the use of medication was less highly correlated with reports of symptoms. Nearly 100% of participants reported having at least one disease state. The number of symptoms reported was strongly related to the number of disease states, and after adjusting for diseases, women reported more symptoms than men. The best predictor of symptom prevalence was the number of disease states followed by the number of drugs used and then age.


Medical Clinics of North America | 1989

Medication Compliance in the Elderly

Ronald B. Stewart; George J. Caranasos

Patient compliance with physicians medication instructions has been a growing concern for nearly two decades. Elderly patients are thought to have more difficulty following prescription instructions because they generally have more medications prescribed, often suffer from cognitive decline, and frequently have physical limitations such as failing eyesight and hearing. Exhibiting a genuine concern to patients for the importance of drug therapy and adherence to directions is the first step to improve compliance. Providing adequate verbal and written medication instruction, and implementing routine assessment of medication compliance should greatly improve response to drug therapy and decrease adverse effects.


Annals of Pharmacotherapy | 1987

Drug use in an ambulatory elderly population: a five-year update.

William E. Hale; Franklin E. May; Ronald G. Marks; Ronald B. Stewart

Drug usage was studied in an ambulatory elderly population in Dunedin, Florida. Prescription and nonprescription drug use in these 2834 participants was compared with use during a period five years earlier. The average number of medications increased from 3.2 in 1978–80 to 3.7 in 1983–85. The most commonly prescribed medications in this population were hydrochlorothiazide-triamterene (13.5 percent), digoxin (9.6 percent), and hydrochlorothiazide (8.4 percent). There was a large increase in the use of nutritional supplements in the past five years, with 18.0 percent of these subjects reporting the use of vitamin E and 15.7 percent taking vitamin C. The general philosophy in geriatrics is to use the fewest drugs possible; however, it appears that the elderly are, in fact, receiving an increasing number of medications.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1991

A longitudinal evaluation of drug use in an ambulatory elderly population

Ronald B. Stewart; Mary T. Moore; Franklin E. May; Ronald G. Marks; William E. Hale

Participants in a geriatric health screening program were studied longitudinally to determine the patterns of drug use over a 10 year period. There were 314 (34.0%) men and 610 (66.0%) women who completed 10 yearly health screening evaluations. The mean number of prescribed and non-prescribed drugs used per participant increased from 2.90 in 1978-79 to 4.08 in 1987-88 (p less than 0.0001). There was no significant difference between men and women in the rate of increased drug use. There was no significant increase in the mean number of drug ingredients per participant used over the 10 year period. The most frequently reported therapeutic categories for 1978-79 were antihypertensives, analgesic-antipyretics, antirheumatics, multiple vitamins, cathartics and vitamin E, which represented 10.2, 7.2, 6.5, 4.9, 4.8 and 3.8% of all categories used. There was a decline in all of these categories between interval 1 and 10. Increased use of drugs, particularly prescribed medications, by the elderly population may present problems of adverse drug reactions, drug interactions and medication compliance in the future. Changing patterns of drug use may have resulted, in part, from introduction of new therapeutic classes and from new treatment concepts over the 10 year study period.


Headache | 1987

Headache in the Elderly: An Evaluation of Risk Factors

William E. Hale; Franklin E. May; Ronald G. Marks; Mary T. Moore; Ronald B. Stewart

SYNOPSIS


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1984

Central nervous system symptoms of elderly subjects using antihypertensive drugs.

William E. Hale; Ronald B. Stewart; Ronald G. Marks

The effects of antihypertensive agents on the frequencies of reported fainting, dizziness, losses of consciousness, and bone fractures were studied in a large, ambulatory elderly population. The frequencies of these symptoms were compared for subjects who used one or more of nine different antihypertensive agents and for subjects who were not using these medications and who served as a control group. Over 40 per cent of the total population were using at least one of the nine drug groups. Women who used antihypertensive medications reported significantly more fainting (P < 0.001), dizziness (P < 0.005) and “blacking‐out spells” (P < 0.002) but significantly fewer bone fractures (P < 0.02) compared with women who were not using such medication in the control group. For men, the use of only one drug group, propranolol, was associated with a significant increase in fainting and dizziness but not blacking‐out spells compared with men in the control. These results suggest that elderly persons may be subject to a variety of central nervous system side effects induced by antihypertensive drugs.


Annals of Pharmacotherapy | 1987

Clinical Research in the Elderly: Ethical and Methodological Considerations

Julie Ann Bell; Franklin E. May; Ronald B. Stewart

Clinically oriented research in the elderly is of growing interest because of increasing numbers of older persons, the relative lack of research data with this population, and recent Food and Drug Administration mandates to study drugs in the elderly. Studies of young, healthy persons cannot necessarily be extrapolated to the elderly due to changes associated with aging and the increased number of concomitant disease states and medications. Subject recruitment may be more time consuming in finding subjects with the appropriate inclusion criteria and lack of exclusion criteria who are willing to participate. Additional concern must be placed on protecting the subjects rights while allowing autonomous decision making. Likewise, protocols may need to be flexible enough to include persons with concomitant disease and medications.

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