Older Australians collect an average of 31 PBS scripts a year – new research


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Australians are living longer than ever before. While this is broadly good news, ageing well comes with a range of challenges.

As people grow older, they’re more likely to develop multiple chronic conditions, including heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and cognitive problems such as dementia.


These conditions often mean people need to take more medications. Around one in three Australians aged over 70 take five or more different medications. While these can be important, and even lifesaving, managing multiple medications can become a major challenge in itself.

We wanted to understand more about how older Australians use medications. In a new study, we looked at ten years of national data from the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS), which subsidises medications for eligible Australians.

What did we find?​

Using a 10% sample of Australians between 2013–23, we examined how often people aged 65 and over visited prescribers and pharmacies for the dispensing of their PBS medicines. Prescribers included GPs and other medical specialists, for example.

We found older Australians visited their prescribers an average of five times a year and made 16 pharmacy visits annually for the supply of their PBS medications. In 2023, people over 65 had an average of 31 PBS-subsidised medicines dispensed throughout the year (this figure may include repeats of the same medicine).

We also found the number of older Australians using five or more regular PBS medications increased by 32% (from 1.03 million to 1.35 million) from 2013 to 2023, likely driven by population ageing.

It’s important to note our study only captured PBS-subsidised medications that were dispensed. Prescriptions that weren’t filled or those not subsidised by the PBS (such as over-the-counter medications and supplements) weren’t included, meaning the true number of medications older people are using is likely even higher.


Managing medications​

While medications are essential for managing health, they can also pose risks. Taking more medications often means a higher likelihood of errors, side effects, drug interactions and hospitalisations.

What’s more, as we age, physiological changes such as reduced kidney and liver function can increase the risk of medication-related harms. Depending on the individual, it could come to a point where the risk of harm eventually outweighs the benefits of the medication.

Sometimes, when it comes to medications, less can be more.

As well as the physical health risks, managing multiple medications can be complex and demanding for older adults and their families. More medications mean more doctors’ visits, more trips to the pharmacy, and prescription costs can also quickly add up. All this can influence what daily life looks like for older people.

Meet ‘Jean’​

Let’s look at a hypothetical case study. Jean is 80 and lives on her own. She is on ten different medications for conditions including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, arthritis, reflux and sleep problems. Some need to be taken multiple times a day, meaning she takes more than ten tablets daily.

Jean’s routine revolves around managing her medications, remembering what to take and when, coping with medication side effects including dizziness and tiredness, and making frequent trips to the doctor and pharmacy.

She’s stopped going to her weekly bowls game, and even lunch outings have become stressful as she needs to remember her pills and time them around meals. Her daughter helps with transport and picking up scripts, but the complexity of her medications has affected her lifestyle, independence, and enjoyment of life.

Although this case study is fictional, it reflects the circumstances many older people find themselves in with regards to medication use.

What can be done?​

It’s important for older people taking multiple medications to talk to their doctor or pharmacist about whether their current medication regimen is still right for them, and how to manage their medication safely and effectively.

Many Australians, particularly older adults, could be eligible to be referred by their GP for a government-funded medication review. These medication reviews are conducted by a credentialed pharmacist and designed to help people get the most benefit from their medications while minimising any potential harms.

However this service remains under-utilised, which motivated a recent campaign to improve awareness and uptake.

Let’s return to Jean. Fortunately, she recently received a detailed medication review.

The reviewing pharmacist was able to make some practical changes to the timing of when Jean takes some of her medications. Also, by suggesting products that combine more than one medication in a single tablet, the pharmacist reduced the number of tablets Jean needs to take every day.


The pharmacist also worked with Jean’s community pharmacy to repackage Jean’s medications into a pill organiser and helped establish a reminder system to help Jean remember to take her medications at the correct times and when to refill her prescriptions.

Finally, the pharmacist queried several of Jean’s medications with her doctor in light of side effects and changes in her health status. As a result, the dose of one medication was halved, and another was discontinued.

Jean now plans to have her medications reviewed annually.

Older Australians tell us they want to enjoy happier, healthier and more fulfilling lives. With the right support, there’s a real opportunity to reduce the burden of taking multiple medications, and help older Australians like Jean not just live longer, but live well.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
 

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Wow 31 😳I must be really healthy I don’t have any scripts to have to bother about.🌞touch wood 🪵 I’ll stay that way.
 
Polypharmacy, often the result of prescription cascades (eg one drug given to counteract the side effects of another, but which generates its own problems requiring a third drug, and so on) is often the result of overdiagnosis and shifting of goalposts as to “what’s normal.” While there is plenty of data around pairs of drugs one should not take, as soon as the combinations add up, the data becomes unwieldy and unreliable, if it exists at all.
One should always ask one’s prescriber “what is the NNT value for such and such a drug?” This is the number-needed-to-treat value, and is directly related to the absolute health risk reduction (or absolute benefit gain) afforded by the drug. An example: statins when prescribed to those who have never experienced a serious cardiovascular event have an NNT of over 100. This means that you have to give 100 people a statin for 5 years to prevent a single serious CV event. The other 99 receive no benefit whatsoever. It translates directly to an absolute risk reduction of 1%. However, the manufacturers will often advertise their products’ risk reduction as “relative” — such as reducing the risk by 50%! Wow! But taking the absolute risk from 2% to 1% is the same thing. Huge reduction in relative risk, but virtually negligible in absolute terms.
Chronic drug usage, prescription or otherwise, always carries risks of its own. Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs such as omeprazole) when taken for long periods of time, are known to promote cognitive difficulties. BP meds can also lower blood pressure too much, resulting in dizziness or falls. It’s not entirely illogical that as one gets older, one might need a bit more oomph anyway — taking someone whose systolic reading is 135 down to 120 with multiple jujubes could well do more harm than good.
Another good question to ask is, “what can I do to get off assorted medications and replace them with nutritional and/or lifestyle changes?” Deprescribing might hurt drug companies’ revenue streams, but if it can be done, the benefits to patients are tremendous — in the pocketbook and elsewhere.
And finally — ask whether a person who is in their late 80s and suffering from cognitive decline might in fact be subject to the side effects of too many drugs — which can mess up biochemical pathways of all sorts. Such a person is probably not going to benefit from certain of their medications anyway.
For the record, I’m a biotech/pharma industry veteran of almost 40 years, and have worked on or led many teams that have discovered and developed currently marketed drugs in a number of medical indications.
 
Last edited:
A few years ago I never thought I would be once a week putting several pills in the Monday to Sunday pill box, so as I remember to take them, but then I am now 84.
 
Polypharmacy, often the result of prescription cascades (eg one drug given to counteract the side effects of another, but which generates its own problems requiring a third drug, and so on) is often the result of overdiagnosis and shifting of goalposts as to “what’s normal.” While there is plenty of data around pairs of drugs one should not take, as soon as the combinations add up, the data becomes unwieldy and unreliable, if it exists at all.
One should always ask one’s prescriber “what is the NNT value for such and such a drug?” This is the number-needed-to-treat value, and is directly related to the absolute health risk reduction (or absolute benefit gain) afforded by the drug. An example: statins when prescribed to those who have never experienced a serious cardiovascular event have an NNT of over 100. This means that you have to give 100 people a statin for 5 years to prevent a single serious CV event. The other 99 receive no benefit whatsoever. It translates directly to an absolute risk reduction of 1%. However, the manufacturers will often advertise their products’ risk reduction as “relative” — such as reducing the risk by 50%! Wow! But taking the absolute risk from 2% to 1% is the same thing. Huge reduction in relative risk, but virtually negligible in absolute terms.
Chronic drug usage, prescription or otherwise, always carries risks of its own. Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs such as omeprazole) when taken for long periods of time, are known to promote cognitive difficulties. BP meds can also lower blood pressure too much, resulting in dizziness or falls. It’s not entirely illogical that as one gets older, one might need a bit more oomph anyway — taking someone whose systolic reading is 135 down to 120 with multiple jujubes could well do more harm than good.
Another good question to ask is, “what can I do to get off assorted medications and replace them with nutritional and/or lifestyle changes?” Deprescribing might hurt drug companies’ revenue streams, but if it can be done, the benefits to patients are tremendous — in the pocketbook and elsewhere.
And finally — ask whether a person who is in their late 80s and suffering from cognitive decline might in fact be subject to the side effects of too many drugs — which can mess up biochemical pathways of all sorts. Such a person is probably not going to benefit from certain of their medications anyway.
For the record, I’m a biotech/pharma industry veteran of almost 40 years, and have worked on or led many teams that have discovered and developed currently marketed drugs in a number of medical indications.
Thank you for contributing and providing this information. I am fortunate in that I am not on any medications. I have seen friends who are on statins and the side effects are not worth taking the drug in the first place. One of my friends was going to be classed as a diabetic after being put on Crestor (Statin) and was going to be given further medications. My Mother was given blood pressure medication and when she got dementia, she forgot to take it. Lo and behold, her blood pressure was normal. Yet she was on blood pressure medication since she had high blood pressure whilst pregnant with my younger brother in 1961. I wonder whether she actually needed it or not but she certainly was on it for a good many years.
 
Only blood pressure tablets for me :p 🏉
 
I take a number of prescription drugs and wish I didn't have to. I have three different inhalers for chronic asthma and also two lots of tablets for high blood pressure and another tablet for heart problems. I also have diabetes2 which is under control with diet. I am only 90 years old so I guess i am lucky to have survived this long before having to take all these prescription drugs! I also have to take iron tablets and vitamin D tablets which are not on the PBS list and which are quite costly.
 
A few years ago I never thought I would be once a week putting several pills in the Monday to Sunday pill box, so as I remember to take them, but then I am now 84.
Same here, I’m 79
 
I take a number of prescription drugs and wish I didn't have to. I have three different inhalers for chronic asthma and also two lots of tablets for high blood pressure and another tablet for heart problems. I also have diabetes2 which is under control with diet. I am only 90 years old so I guess i am lucky to have survived this long before having to take all these prescription drugs! I also have to take iron tablets and vitamin D tablets which are not on the PBS list and which are quite costly.
Congratulations on reaching 90. That is wonderful.
 
Wow 31 😳I must be really healthy I don’t have any scripts to have to bother about.🌞touch wood 🪵 I’ll stay that way.
Same. At 76, still donate Plasma and enjoy a wine each night, and walk every day.
 
does not take me long to get on the freebie list. or the medicaire freebies.
 
  • Wow
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