Abstract
Objectives
To investigate the monthly number of prescribed medication (NPM) patterns among different elderly populations and the factors associated with monthly NPM changes.
Methods
This retrospective cohort study was conducted using the databases obtained from National Health Insurance Research Databases and a 2000-bed academic medical center in Taiwan (i.e., single-center cohort). We compared the monthly NPMs, demographic characteristics, disease states, and health care contacts among the National Health Insurance elderly cohorts in 2006 and 2007, and for those elderly in the national and single-center cohorts who had outpatient visits from November to October in 2006 to 2007 and 2007 to 2008, respectively. Generalized estimating equation analyses of repeated measures were performed for monthly NPMs.
Results
The average monthly NPMs among the National Health Insurance elderly cohort was 2.33 in 2006 and 4.39 in 2007, respectively. After controlling for other factors, the increment in the proportion of monthly NPMs among the older elderly patients, in certain months and for those patients with hypertension and dyslipidemia, was statistically significant among the single-center cohort but was not observed in the national elderly cohort. The proportional changes decreased significantly among patients who made visits to emergency rooms and who were hospitalized during a 1-year period.
Conclusions
There was an incremental trend of monthly NPMs among the national cohort from 2006 to 2007. Although acute exacerbations and hospitalization might be the protecting factors of increasing monthly NPMs, more attention should be paid toward high-utilization patients with specific diseases during certain months for different elderly cohorts.
Authors
Hsiang-Wen Lin Chia-Ing Li Chih-Hsueh Lin Alex C. Lin Cheng-Chieh Lin Tsai-Chung Li