≥ 92% of participants will have more awareness and knowledge about the prevalence of older adults taking multiple medications.
CEUFast, Inc. is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. ANCC Provider number #P0274.
≥ 92% of participants will have more awareness and knowledge about the prevalence of older adults taking multiple medications.
At the completion of this course, the participant will be able to:
The purpose of this course is to provide information that may enable clinicians to decrease risks associated with older adults taking multiple medications. Many older adults take multiple medications and are at risk of developing an adverse drug reaction. Adverse drug reactions can be serious, costly, and result in decreased quality of life and increased depression, falls, frailty, morbidity, mortality, and hospital admission rates. Assessment and evaluation of multiple medications that older adults take is necessary to identify potentially inappropriate medications and make a thoughtful determination about whether to continue, lower the dose or frequency, or discontinue the medication. Assessment involves gathering and organizing pertinent medication-related information for older adults and identifying potentially inappropriate medications. Evaluation involves using a systematic process to decide whether to continue, adjust, or discontinue potentially inappropriate medications. Adverse medication events may occur, including falls and delirium. Ultimately, making pharmacological decisions that optimize the health of older adults with multiple medical problems requires thoughtful consideration, knowledge regarding drug effects and interactions, and individualized treatment plans.
Polymedication | More risks than benefits of a medication for a particular older adult. |
(Fernández et al., 2021) |
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Assessment and evaluation of multiple medications that older adults take is necessary to identify potentially inappropriate medications and make a thoughtful determination about whether to continue, lower the dose or frequency, or discontinue medications.
Clinicians need to accurately and systematically assess medication use in older adults.
Strategies to assess the appropriateness of medications in older adults are categorized as explicit or implicit. Explicit approaches involve checking each medication the older adult is taking to see if it is on a predesigned list of medications to avoid, and implicit approaches involve the use of clinical judgment and analysis of clinical information (Fernández et al., 2021; Zidan & Awaisu, 2024). Many clinicians begin a medication assessment by using an explicit list, such as the Beers Criteria, the Screening Tool of Older Person's Prescriptions (STOPP), and the Screening Tool to Alert to Right Treatment (START) (Please see Table 2.) Once potentially inappropriate medications are identified, clinicians often use an implicit approach to determine the appropriateness of medications.
The Beers list of medications to be avoided was developed in 1991 and has been periodically updated by the American Geriatric Society (Al-Busaidi et al., 2020; By the 2023 American Geriatrics Society Beers Criteria® Update Expert Panel, 2023; Fernández et al., 2021). |
The Screening Tool of Older Person's Prescriptions (STOPP) and the Screening Tool to Alert to Right Treatment (START) are guidelines organized by physiological systems (Silcock et al., 2023; Verdoorn et al., 2021). |
When conducting evaluations, clinicians should consider that inappropriate prescribing involves failing to prescribe preferred medications based on best practice (medication selection) and prescribing appropriate medications at a higher dose, frequency, and duration than is clinically indicated (Al-Busaidi et al., 2020). Implicit and explicit strategies to evaluate the appropriateness of medications have not been widely implemented in clinical practice because of provider time constraints and lack of reimbursement (McCarthy et al., 2022). Interprofessional medication reviews that include a pharmacist, physician, advanced practice registered nurse, physician assistant, and nurse are preferable to one clinician reviewing the older adults' medications for appropriateness; this is because consideration of various disciplinary perspectives tends to result in wiser decision-making than when reviews are conducted by one team member.
After assessment, which includes gathering and organizing pertinent medication-related information and explicit and/or implicit review, has been completed, evaluation begins. Evaluation involves using a systematic process to decide whether to continue, adjust, or deprescribe (discontinue) potentially inappropriate medications (Silcock et al., 2023).
While evaluation of multiple medications in older adults should be a routine part of care, often, due to time and resource constraints, thoughtful decisions are not made regarding medication continuation, adjustment, or discontinuation. To identify feasible ways of including medication evaluation in the care of older adults, innovative models to reduce the adverse effects of multiple medications are being implemented in practice and analyzed. Two such innovative evaluation models are:
A study of 21 primary care providers implementing an electronic decision support system to evaluate the appropriateness of medications in 160 older adults showed on average, clinicians spent a total of 28 minutes per older adult conducting a systematic medication review. The review time included 13 minutes of entering data in the system, 10 minutes of analyzing findings, and 5 minutes of discussing recommendations with older adults. On average, each review yielded 3.7 recommendations (standard deviation=1.8). |
While the goal is to prevent adverse events that may occur with older adults taking multiple medications, adverse effects may occur for a variety of reasons. Therefore, clinicians should educate individuals about the purpose, risks, benefits, and potential adverse effects of each medication being taken.
Annually, 33% of older adults have at least one fall, and 20% of those falls result in injury. Approximately 40% of falls in older adults are preventable.
The primary principle of pharmacological management of multiple health conditions in older adults is a periodic evaluation of the risks and benefits of each medication in the context of the older adult's life. While avoidance of preventable adverse medication reactions is necessary, the most important goal of pharmacological management should be improving the health, quality of life, and functional ability of older adults (Nwadiugwu, 2020; Silcock et al., 2023).
Patient
72-year-old male taking oxycodone 20 milligrams (mg) four times a day and alprazolam 1 mg three times a day.
The Case
Mr. Jones is a 72-year-old male who was previously seeing another provider at a large outpatient clinic; however, that clinician is no longer at the practice. He has chronic pain, diabetes, hypertension, irregular heartbeat, and nerve damage. Mr. Jones is taking 16 prescription medications, including oxycodone 20 mg four times per day for pain, which he receives from a pain management practice elsewhere, and alprazolam 1 mg three times daily for anxiety, which his previous provider at this practice prescribed. He states he has taken oxycodone and alprazolam for many years.
Mr. Jones' prescription monitoring program report shows: 1. an unintentional overdose risk score identified him as being at significant risk of overdose, 2. he has had three prescribers and used five pharmacies in the past two years, and 3. he has received 57 controlled substance prescriptions in the last two years. He states he previously used crack cocaine and occasionally drinks a glass of wine.
Mr. Jones says he is in a difficult position because his previous provider wrote him a 30-day prescription for alprazolam with no discussion about tapering, no care coordination prior to leaving the practice, and no plan in place to prevent withdrawal symptoms. As a result, he now finds himself taking alprazolam 3 mg daily without a plan to taper off of this medication safely. During the appointment, he vacillated between being tearful and threatening. He demanded that this provider take over prescribing alprazolam.
Next Steps
Documentation from the previous provider was available in the electronic medical record (EMR), and the prescription monitoring program report was available. Records from the pain management provider and other providers the patient was seeing were not available; however, he verified that he was taking no other medications aside from the 16 listed in the EMR. The EMR showed that Mr. Jones was taking three medications for blood pressure, two medications for diabetes, two medications for gastrointestinal issues, six medications for mental health, one medication for pain, and two medications for relaxation.
While several medication adjustments or discontinuations needed to be considered in the future, the priority was the safe discontinuation of alprazolam with an alternate plan to assist him in dealing with his anxiety. The provider and older adult reviewed recommendation #11 of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) clinical practice guidelines for prescribing opioids for pain, which says, when possible, opioids and benzodiazepines should not be used together (Dowell et al., 2022). A 12-week tapering plan of 0.25 mg/week was implemented.
Mr. Jones was informed about the risk of withdrawal associated with the taper and given instructions about the physiological and psychological symptoms of withdrawal that could occur. He was instructed to seek emergency help if he developed significant physiological withdrawal symptoms. The nurse contacted him weekly throughout the taper, and he began counseling to learn healthy coping strategies and relaxation techniques. As alprazolam is a difficult medication to taper, instead of 12 weeks, the taper took 24 weeks. Although other medication changes needed to be considered, they were not addressed until Mr. Jones safely discontinued alprazolam.
While best practice would have involved his previous provider discussing a benzodiazepine taper with him, that provider coordinating care with the new provider and development of a patient-provider relationship prior to initiating a benzodiazepine taper, circumstances are often not ideal in clinical practice. Therefore, adaptability, adherence to best practices, good communication, and focusing on optimizing the older adult's health are priorities.
Older adults are often on multiple medications. It is imperative that healthcare providers take the time to review the patient's medical record, diagnosis, and current medication list to assess and evaluate if any medications inappropriately being prescribed can be discontinued safely. Ultimately, effectively treating the patient's health conditions and avoiding adverse events due to polypharmacy are crucial.
CEUFast, Inc. is committed to furthering diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). While reflecting on this course content, CEUFast, Inc. would like you to consider your individual perspective and question your own biases. Remember, implicit bias is a form of bias that impacts our practice as healthcare professionals. Implicit bias occurs when we have automatic prejudices, judgments, and/or a general attitude towards a person or a group of people based on associated stereotypes we have formed over time. These automatic thoughts occur without our conscious knowledge and without our intentional desire to discriminate. The concern with implicit bias is that this can impact our actions and decisions with our workplace leadership, colleagues, and even our patients. While it is our universal goal to treat everyone equally, our implicit biases can influence our interactions, assessments, communication, prioritization, and decision-making concerning patients, which can ultimately adversely impact health outcomes. It is important to keep this in mind in order to intentionally work to self-identify our own risk areas where our implicit biases might influence our behaviors. Together, we can cease perpetuating stereotypes and remind each other to remain mindful to help avoid reacting according to biases that are contrary to our conscious beliefs and values.