Editorial
Medications in Post-Acute and Long-Term Care: Challenges and Controversies

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Concern About Overprescribing of Certain Medication Classes

Certain medications and medication classes are particularly controversial because of concern about adverse effects from potentially inappropriate use. Among the areas of greatest concern include drugs with anticholinergic properties, medications for mood and behavior, antibiotics, and proton pump inhibitors.

  • Anticholinergic burden. It has long been known that many medications have anticholinergic properties, which not only produce bothersome symptoms such as dry mouth and constipation but also

Need to Better Tailor Prescribing Based on Resident Characteristics

A related issue is the optimization and individualization of medication prescribing in the nursing home setting. Attention to this area is needed because residents vary widely in their risk, comorbid conditions, life expectancy, care goals, and personal priorities; so, medications that are administered to prevent future morbidity and extend life expectancy will be appropriate for some nursing home residents and not for others. Among the medication classes discussed in this issue of JAMDA where

Other Themes Around Improving the Overall Quality of Prescribing

Many challenges exist around a broad range of topics that can roughly be described as attempts to improve prescribing. Among the themes that are reflected in current research are the following:

  • Better, more systematic methods of quality assessment and improvement around drug prescribing, administration, and monitoring. In particular, research is seeking to better use technology to provide decision support, track medication prescribing, relate current practice to established standards and

Deprescribing

Because physicians are rarely on site in most post-acute and long-term care settings, communication about patient problems is often by telephone, and this process tends to lead to far more additions to the medication list than subtractions.56 This and other decision-making factors in the long-term care setting, combined with multimorbidity in the patient population, result in long medication lists that often contain drugs that are no longer needed or for which the potential for harm outweighs

Principles of Clinical Practice Around Medication Prescribing and Use

One additional article in this month's JAMDA merits special comment. It is a multinational consensus paper on principles for clinical practice, research, and education around medication management in frail older persons.62 That article provides a valuable overview of good practice in addressing the issues outlined in this editorial. The authors identify the following principles of clinical practice: up-to-date medication lists, medication reconciliation, accounting for the patient's capacity to

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  • Cited by (6)

    • The Ambiguous Reality of Prescribing in Geriatric Practice

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    • As-Needed Prescribing and Administration of Psychotropic Medications in Assisted Living: A 7-State Study

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      This study is unique in its focus on AL resident- and community-level characteristics associated with the prescription and administration of PRN psychotropic medications. PRN medication administration is an emerging issue in drug therapy in acute care and nursing homes,30,31 in part because PRN administration can result in increased errors, polypharmacy, and poor health outcomes.17–19 Although PRN psychotropic medication prescriptions and administration are rare, residents with dementia account for a proportionately larger share of PRN psychotropic medication use.

    • Post-acute long-term care COVID-19 medication optimization survey: Informing medication management initiatives

      2022, Geriatric Nursing
      Citation Excerpt :

      It is critical that the healthcare workforce receive training to utilize telehealth for education, collaboration, and interprofessional practice and learn how to ensure that telehealth mitigates, rather than exacerbates, disparities in health and healthcare access. Additionally, there were multiple lessons learned from the rapid development and implementation of the MMG during the pandemic which can help propel pragmatic clinical trials that will help us reimagine medication management initiatives in PA-LTC.8 For instance, comments suggested that this pandemic-centered MMG should be adapted into a post-pandemic guideline that can further tactics to address medication burden.

    • THE NATIONAL IMPERATIVE TO IMPROVE: NURSING HOME QUALITY: Honoring Our Commitment to Residents, Families, and Staff

      2022, The National Imperative to Improve: Nursing Home Quality: Honoring Our Commitment to Residents, Families, and Staff
    • Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment

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    • Physiology of Aging

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    The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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