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Browsing by Subject "iäkkäillä vältettävät lääkkeet"

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  • Riihimäki, Viivi (2024)
    Falls are common in older people, some of which result in serious injuries. Falls are a burden on the health care system and preventing them could reduce the burden. Risk factors for falls include impaired vision, certain chronic diseases, female gender, old age, alcohol consumption, foot problems and environmental factors. Certain medications also increase the risk of falls. Drugs affecting the central nervous system and drugs affecting the cardiovascular system are the main drugs that increase the risk of falls, known as fall-risk-increasing drugs (FRIDs). The aim of the thesis was to analyze the medication lists of patients who had fallen or were at risk of falling and who were living at home and were transported by the emergency services to the HUS emergency unit in Jorvi. The aim of the study was to investigate whether the medication lists of patients (n=216) included fall-risk-increasing drugs, potentially inappropriate medication, adverse risks associated with the risk of falling and drug-drug interactions. The study also compared three groups of patients with different fall statuses. Group 1 consisted of patients who had fallen and patients at risk of falling (n=79). Group 2 consisted of patients at risk of falling who had not fallen (n=85). Group 3 included patients who had fallen but were not at risk of falling (n=52). Microsoft Excel and IBM SPSS Statistics were used to analyze the data. In the data 52.3% of patients were on polypharmacy. Patients in group 3 had fewer regular medications than patients in group 1 (p=0.001) and group 2 (p=0.010). Almost half (46.3%) of the patients in the data set had at least one FRID medication in regular use. Group 1 patients had the highest number of FRIDs in use and Group 3 patients the lowest. The most frequently used FRID was furosemide (n=54). According to the Med75+ database, about a quarter of patients (27.3%) and almost half (48.6%) of patients according to the Beers criteria were regularly using potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) in older people. Level D adverse events associated with risk of falls were present in 28.2% (n=62) of patients in the whole dataset when considering regular medication use. Multiple patients were taking risperidone, amitriptyline and tramadol, which belong to FRIDs and PIMs medicine and are associated with D-level adverse risks. In the whole dataset, only a few patients (n=12) were found to have a category D interaction with regular medications. Class C interactions were found in 38.9% of patients. The falls risk assessment performed by emergency medical services was reasonably good at predicting medical risk factors associated with falls. Particular attention should be paid to patients at risk of falling who have not fallen yet. The reduction of medication factors that increase the risk of falls could potentially prevent falls in the future. Once patients at risk of falls have been identified, pharmacists could be used in the emergency department to identify and possibly unwind medication factors that increase the risk of falls in the older people, in collaboration with physicians. The knowledge of pharmacists could also be utilized to review medication risks associated with falls in community pharmacies.