Background the increasing number of multimorbid older people places high demands on future health care systems. To inform the discussion on how to structure future care strategies, we aimed to describe the temporal relationship between admission, and morbidity and mortality in nursing home residents. Methods data on 5,179 older individuals admitted to 94 Danish nursing homes in 12 municipalities during 2015–2017 were linked to the nationwide Danish health registries to retrieve information on the temporal relation between nursing home admission and morbidity and mortality. Results at the time of nursing home admission, the majority were women (63%). Male residents were younger than women (median 82 vs 85 years) and had a higher prevalence of comorbidities (median Charlson score 2 vs 1 among women). The median survival after nursing home admission was 25.8 months, with the 3-year survival being 37%. Three-year survival was lower among men (29 vs 43% among women) and among the oldest residents (23% among those aged ≥90 years vs 64% among individuals ≤65 years). In addition to age and sex, predictors of mortality included hospitalisations prior to nursing home admission and a high burden of comorbidity. The rate of hospitalisations, primarily for reasons related to frailty, increased substantially during the 9 months prior to nursing home admission. Conclusion we provide detailed information on differences in morbidity and mortality across age span and sex at the time of nursing home admission, thereby contributing to the ongoing discussion of how to structure the future health care system.
Background Data on drug utilisation patterns in nursing home populations is scarce. We aimed to describe drug use patterns in Danish nursing home residents. Methods We established a cohort of 5,179 individuals (63% women; median age of 84 years) admitted into 94 nursing homes across Denmark during 2015–2017. Data on prescription drug use and other census data were obtained from the nationwide Danish health registries. Results The total number of drug classes filled increased from a median of 6 drugs (interquartile range [IQR] 3–9) at 18–24 months before nursing home admission to a median of 8 drugs (IQR 6–11) just after admission, with the most common drug classes comprising paracetamol (61%), platelet inhibitors (41%), proton pump inhibitors (34%), statins (33%) and potassium supplements (31%). The incidence rate of new drug treatments increased from 21 new treatments/100 residents/month at 12–24 months before admission to a peak of 71 new treatments/100 residents/month in the month prior to admission, while it levelled off to about 34 new treatments/100 residents/month after 6–9 months. The drug classes primarily responsible for this peak were laxatives, antibiotics and analgesics. The largest absolute increases were seen for laxatives (53%), paracetamol (43%) and antidepressants (36%), all showing a marked increase up to and following admission. A high proportion of residents remained on therapy in the 3-year period following admission, with users of antidepressants and antidementia drugs being most persistent. Conclusion Nursing home admission is associated with an increase in use of both predominantly preventive and non-preventive drug classes.
IntroductionPaediatric polypharmacy is defined as two or more medicines, which is lower than the definition in adults (>5 medicines). A recent scoping review of paediatric polypharmacy found a mean prevalence of 39.7% with a large range from 0.9% to 98.4%.MethodsPrescribing data from 85 active practices across Liverpool Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), was extracted on the 6th January 2021 to include all patients below 18 years of age. Prescribing data was also obtained for Alder Hey Children’s Hospital from the electronic prescribing system, Meditech on the 12th January 2021. Descriptive analysis was performed.ResultsOf the 110,097 CYP registered in primary care, 17,271 (16%) were prescribed >2 medications, 3,507 (3·2%) >5, 715 (0·7%) ≥10, and 202 (0·2%) ≥15. The median number of CYP prescribed ≥10 and ≥15 medications per primary care practice was 7 (range 0–34) and 2 (range 0–11), respectively.Within Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, 139 inpatients were identified, with 126 patients (91%) prescribed two or more medicines. The most frequently prescribed medicine was paracetamol. When ‘as required’ and ‘one off’ medicines were removed, omeprazole was the most frequently prescribed medicine.ConclusionsMany children within Liverpool CCG meet the definition for paediatric polypharmacy. Further research is required to assess the consequences of paediatric polypharmacy and address its management which is under recognised and underrepresented in the literature to date.
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