Attenzione: i dati modificati non sono ancora stati salvati. Per confermare inserimenti o cancellazioni di voci è necessario confermare con il tasto SALVA/INSERISCI in fondo alla pagina
The dramatic demographic changes that are occurring in the third millennium are modifying the mission of generalist professionals such as primary care physicians and internists. Multiple chronic diseases and the related prescription of multiple medications are becoming typical problems and present many challenges. Unfortunately, the available evidence regarding the efficacy of medications has been generated by clinical trials involving patients completely different from those currently admitted to internal medicine: much younger, affected by a single disease and managed in a highly controlled research environment. Because only registries can provide information on drug effectiveness in real-life conditions, REPOSI started in 2008 with the goal of acquiring data on elderly people acutely admitted to medical or geriatric hospital wards in Italy. The main goals of the registry were to evaluate drug prescription appropriateness, the relationship between multimorbidity/polypharmacy and such cogent outcomes as hospital mortality and re-hospitalization, and the identification of disease clusters that most often concomitantly occur in the elderly. The findings of 3-yearly REPOSI runs (2008, 2010, 2012) suggest the following pertinent tasks for the internist in order to optimally handle their elderly patients: the management of multiple medications, the need to become acquainted with geriatric multidimensional tools, the promotion and implementation of a multidisciplinary team approach to patient health and care and the corresponding involvement of patients and their relatives and caregivers. There is also a need for more research, tailored to the peculiar features of the multimorbid elderly patient.
Multimorbidity and polypharmacy in the elderly: Lessons from REPOSI / Mannucci, P.M., Nobili, A., Mannucci, P.M., Nobili, A., Tettamanti, M., Pasina, L., Franchi, C., Sparacio, E., Alborghetti, S., Di Costanzo, R., Eldin, T.K., Tettamanti, M., Djade, C.D., Salerno, F., Corrao, S., Marengoni, A., Marcucci, M., Prisco, D., Silvestri, E., Cenci, C., et al.. - In: INTERNAL AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1828-0447. - 9:7(2014), pp. 723-734. [10.1007/s11739-014-1124-1]
Multimorbidity and polypharmacy in the elderly: Lessons from REPOSI
The dramatic demographic changes that are occurring in the third millennium are modifying the mission of generalist professionals such as primary care physicians and internists. Multiple chronic diseases and the related prescription of multiple medications are becoming typical problems and present many challenges. Unfortunately, the available evidence regarding the efficacy of medications has been generated by clinical trials involving patients completely different from those currently admitted to internal medicine: much younger, affected by a single disease and managed in a highly controlled research environment. Because only registries can provide information on drug effectiveness in real-life conditions, REPOSI started in 2008 with the goal of acquiring data on elderly people acutely admitted to medical or geriatric hospital wards in Italy. The main goals of the registry were to evaluate drug prescription appropriateness, the relationship between multimorbidity/polypharmacy and such cogent outcomes as hospital mortality and re-hospitalization, and the identification of disease clusters that most often concomitantly occur in the elderly. The findings of 3-yearly REPOSI runs (2008, 2010, 2012) suggest the following pertinent tasks for the internist in order to optimally handle their elderly patients: the management of multiple medications, the need to become acquainted with geriatric multidimensional tools, the promotion and implementation of a multidisciplinary team approach to patient health and care and the corresponding involvement of patients and their relatives and caregivers. There is also a need for more research, tailored to the peculiar features of the multimorbid elderly patient.
Adverse drug effects; Aging; Drug prescription; Multidimensional evaluation; Multimorbidity; Polypharmacy; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Humans; Internal Medicine; Italy; Male; Registries; Societies, Medical; Comorbidity; Geriatrics; Polypharmacy; Internal Medicine; Emergency Medicine
none
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Contributo su RIVISTA::Articolo su rivista
262
Multimorbidity and polypharmacy in the elderly: Lessons from REPOSI / Mannucci, P.M., Nobili, A., Mannucci, P.M., Nobili, A., Tettamanti, M., Pasina, L., Franchi, C., Sparacio, E., Alborghetti, S., Di Costanzo, R., Eldin, T.K., Tettamanti, M., Djade, C.D., Salerno, F., Corrao, S., Marengoni, A., Marcucci, M., Prisco, D., Silvestri, E., Cenci, C., et al.. - In: INTERNAL AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1828-0447. - 9:7(2014), pp. 723-734. [10.1007/s11739-014-1124-1]
Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11380/1138219
Citazioni
64
131
120
social impact
Conferma cancellazione
Sei sicuro che questo prodotto debba essere cancellato?
simulazione ASN
La simulazione può differire dall'esito di un’eventuale domanda ASN sia per errori di catalogazione e/o dati mancanti in IRIS, sia per la variabilità dei dati bibliometrici nel tempo. L’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia non si assume alcuna responsabilità in merito all’uso che il diretto interessato o terzi faranno della simulazione.