| |
When medications are prescribed, the
intent is to improve your quality of life by curing a disease, reducing
or eliminating the symptoms of a disease, arresting or slowing a
disease process, or preventing a disease or its symptoms from appearing
in the first place. But, medication is a two-edged sword. The same
dose of a medication given to two different people may help one
and harm the other. This is especially true with the elderly. Even
when medications are taken as intended, some adverse reactions occur
that are severe enough to cause disability and even death.
The Journal of the American Medical
Association recently stated that if adverse reactions to medications
were classified as a distinct disease, it would rank as the
fifth leading cause of death in the U.S. The economic cost
rivals that of cancer, Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, and other
major diseases and conditions commonly affecting the elderly population.
People over age 65 are especially vulnerable to medication-related
problems, due to the number of medications they take and the biologic
changes of aging and disease. Medical experts believe that many
medication-related problems are predictable and thus preventable.
If your pharmacist is a Geriatric Certified Pharmacist,
he or she has demonstrated knowledge and skills in geriatric pharmaceutical
care and will be better prepared to advise you on your drug therapy
needs. Click here
for more details.
|
|