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Medication Safety for Seniors

Someone sorting medications into a pill organizer

The medications we take help us manage a variety of health conditions that become more common as we grow older, such as high blood pressure and cholesterol, diabetes, arthritis, heart disease and sleep problems. Yet we might take so many medications that managing them is a health problem itself! Our bodies process substances differently as we age. For example, it can take longer for a medication to be eliminated from the body, which can allow an unsafe level of the drug to build up. Many common drugs can have negative side effects, especially combined with other drugs. We might even end up taking a new medication to address the side effects of an old one!

So, right along with managing our health conditions, itā€™s also important to manage the medications we take for those and other illnesses.

Here are some suggestions from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA):

  1. Take your medications as recommended, with ongoing input from your doctor. A medical officer at the FDA emphasizes that as a society, we rely on pharmaceuticals to help us achieve longer and higher-quality lives, which is a significant success of Western medicine. However, medications must be approached with care and taken according to directions to ensure their effectiveness. This is especially important for treating chronic conditions like high blood pressure and diabetes, where medications only work when taken regularly and as prescribed. Itā€™s crucial not to skip doses or alter the amount of medication without consulting a healthcare provider, as every medication is unique and carefully dosed based on thorough testing.
  2. Keep a list of all the medications you take. Especially if an older adult takes a lot of different medications, itā€™s easy to be confused about how, when, and how long to take a particular prescription or nonprescription drug. Make a list of the medications you take, including the name of the medication, the dosage, and how often you take it. Keep your list up to date at all times. And give a copy to the person you list as your emergency contact in documents, so they can tell healthcare personnel what medications you take if you arenā€™t able to communicate that information.
  3. Be alert for side effects. When we pick up a prescription, we often receive an information sheet that contains a long list of possible negative side effects of the drug. Donā€™t ignore those warnings; itā€™s good to know what might happen so you can recognize a problem right away. Otherwise, you might chalk up symptoms to an illness, or to ā€œjust growing olderā€ or even to Alzheimerā€™s disease! Problems can be caused by a single drug, or the interaction of one medication with another one. That includes prescription drugs, nonprescription preparations, herbalsā€”and donā€™t forget that alcohol is also a drug.
  4. Talk to your doctor about all the medications you take. The FDA recommends having your prescription and nonprescription drugs reviewed at least once a year. Report side effects and other questions you have about each medication. And be sure you know why you are taking a particular drug and if itā€™s still necessary. Studies show seniors might start a medication and then just keep on taking itā€”even if, in some cases, it is no longer necessary. Especially when an older adult sees several doctors, itā€™s easy for an unneeded drug to be overlooked, or for a senior to take drugs that interact negatively with each other.

 

Source: IlluminAge AgeWise reporting on recommendations from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration

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