Regular use of antipsychotic and antidepressant medication has increased among residents of
Sydney nursing homes since 2003, an expert says.
In a letter published in the latest Medical Journal of Australia, Clinical Professor John
Snowdon and co-authors also reported that regular use of anxiolytic and hypnotic medication
has decreased since the 1990s. They compared their 2009 study into psychotropic medication
use in Sydney nursing homes with similar studies conducted in 1993, 1998 and 2003.
Prof Snowdon said that the use of antipsychotic agents fell between 1993 and 1998 but by
2009 there had been a progressive change from conventional antipsychotics to a three-to-one
preference for atypical antipsychotic medication. By 2009, the rate of regular use of
antipsychotic medication had risen above the level it had been in 1993.
In 2009, 25.6 per cent of residents were regularly taking an antidepressant compared with
15.6 per cent in 1993, while the proportion of residents prescribed anxiolytic (4.7 per cent) or
hypnotic medication (11.1 per cent) regularly had fallen.
Prof Snowdon said that over time, revision of management guidelines, warnings about
potentially lethal side effects, and introduction of new drugs have contributed to changes in
the pattern of use of psychotropic medication in aged care facilities.
However, Prof Snowdon noted that the findings could not be generalised as recent evidence
from Tasmania showed that 42 per cent of residents were taking benzodiazepines regularly.
"Nevertheless, changes in medication use should provoke discussion," Prof Snowdon said.
Source
The Medical Journal of Australia
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