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Cardiometabolic diseases and active aging - polypharmacy in control

Adriana Nancy Medeiros dos Santos, Dulcinéia Rebecca Cappelletti Nogueira, Beatriz Aparecida Ozello Gutierrez, Rosa Yuka Sato Chubaci, Caroline Oliveira

2020Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To estimate the prevalence of cardiometabolic diseases and their association with polypharmacy in elderly people at the University of the Third Age (Portuguese acronym: UnATI). METHODS: A cross-sectional, descriptive, analytical study with 121 elderly patients. The prevalence ratio, Pearson's Chi-square test and Fisher's exact test were used as measures of association. RESULTS: At the mean age of 68.3, most elderly had at least one cardiometabolic disease (82.6%), of which hypertension was the most prevalent (71.1%), and consumed prescription drugs of continuous use (92.6%). Almost half of the elderly (48.2%) used combinations of drugs, which suggests a high cardiovascular risk. Polypharmacy due to prescription was observed in almost one-third (28.6%) of the sample, associated with the use of antihypertensives (p=0.004), antidiabetics (p=0.000) or lipid-lowering agents (p<0.000). CONCLUSIONS: Clinical guidelines recommend changes in lifestyle, but increased pharmacotherapy prevails in practice, which increases the risk of adverse events, especially in old age.

Topics & Concepts

PolypharmacyMedicineMedical prescriptionBeers CriteriaPharmacotherapyCross-sectional studyGerontologyInternal medicinePharmacologyPathologyPharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesBlood Pressure and Hypertension StudiesHealthcare Regulation
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