Wednesday, January 23, 2008

TOO MUCH MEDICINE CAN MAKE YOU SICK

Part Two of Two
What Does All This Mean To YOU?


To quote from the last paragraph of Dr. Wolf’s article: “A serious problem exists because both doctors and patients do not realize that practically any symptom in older adults and in many younger adults can be caused or worsened by drugs. Some doctors and patients assume that what are actually adverse drug reactions are simply signs of aging.”

Be assured, my friends, that ageism in our medical system in the United States is alive and well. We must be advocates for ourselves AND for those we love who may, merely by chronological age, be potential victims of this vicious and insidious “ism.”

One practical note: if you are looking for a good nursing home and you learn that one of the disadvantages of the residents who live there is that each tends to be on nine or more medications, BEWARE! The federal government agency that oversees care in nursing homes has set “nine” as the cutoff number of medicines at which an individual may be at high risk for being inappropriately medicated. “Too much medicine can make you sick.”

Second practical note: when you get a prescription, ask questions about side effects. Ask about other possible approaches as alternatives to the recommended prescription. In other words, get enough information to assure that you are able to give informed consent to the primary care provider’s suggested treatment. Ask these questions too when you accompany an older adult to their primary care provider.

Third practical note: find a geriatrician for your primary care provider if you are over 60 years of age. There is a not-so-recent field of medicine, geriatrics that specializes in the care of adults 60 and older. These primary care providers have special training in gerontology and geriatric medicine. As we age, our bodies and even typical symptoms of various disorders do not fit the classic medical textbook description. Much like infants and children who, because they are in a unique developmental stage, are universally under the care of a pediatrician, we older adults are best served by those specialists who understand, through extensive training, the older body.

A physician may be a board-certified geriatrician. Or, a physician may obtain a Certificate of Added Qualifications (CAQ) in Geriatric Medicine or Geriatric Psychiatry. This CAQ is offered through medical certifying boards in family practice, internal medicine, osteopathic medicine and psychiatry for physicians who have completed a fellowship program in geriatrics.

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