Posts Tagged ‘drugging the elderly’

Are Nursing Homes Over-Drugging Their Residents?

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

SF Weekly – October 26, 2011

by Peter Jamison

Click image to watch video: Psychiatric Abuse of the Elderly

According to the San Francisco-based organization California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR), more than 25,000 California nursing-home residents are being given anti-psychotic drugs. That’s about a quarter of the state’s nursing-home population, and according to CANHR and other elder-rights activists, it’s a figure that’s way too high — particularly considering the negative side effects these medications can have.

“They’re being sedated into zombie-hood,” says CANHR staff lawyer Tony Chicotel. He adds that anti-psychotic medications increase the risk of death among seniors, are prescribed in place of more effective non-drug methods for handling patients with dementia, and are often give without obtaining patients’ consent.

“They’re very rarely asked whether they want to take the medication,” Chicotel says.

For More information watch this video or read all the facts here

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The Way Antipsychotics Are Used in Nursing Homes Called “A form of elder abuse” by Patient Advocates

Monday, December 13th, 2010

NurseWeek—Dec 13, 2010

Over-medication of dementia patients is a looming problem as the number of such patients in the U.S. continues to grow, a panel of experts told a Senate Aging Committee forum on Dec. 8.

Panelists said over-medication, sometimes with anti-psychotic drugs, frequently occurs with dementia patients because caregivers or family members may mistake complaints of physical illness for unruly behavior.

Patricia McGinnis, executive director of the California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform, said nursing homes must be “accountable” for the drugs they administer.

“The way anti-psychotic drugs are used in nursing homes is a form of elder abuse,” McGinnis told the forum. “Instead of providing individualized care, many homes indiscriminately use these drugs to sedate and subdue residents.”

By learning more about residents to understand their needs and personalities, and establishing work schedules that allow staff to consistently work with the same residents, according to panelists, nursing homes can reduce the use of drugs as a solution to unruly behavior by dementia patients.

Non-drug approaches also can be helpful for caregivers, according to panelist Laura Gitlin, PhD, director of the Jefferson Center for Applied Research on Aging and Health at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.

She said that providing at-home caregivers with specific skills training in stress reduction, communication and problem-solving techniques can reduce depression and improve self-rated health, sleep quality and overall well-being.

Gitlin described an occupational program at her university that developed meaningful activities for dementia patients based on their capabilities. The program cost $941.63 per family per year, compared with $1,825 for drug treatment programs. The program also saved caregivers about five hours a day in time they would have otherwise spent in hands-on care.

http://news.nurse.com/article/20101213/NATIONAL02/112130006/-1/frontpage

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