Steinman Michael A, Low Marcelo, Balicer Ran D, Shadmi Efrat
University of California, San Francisco, and the San Francisco VA Health Care System, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Clalit Research Institute, Tel Aviv, Israel.
J Gen Intern Med. 2017 Aug;32(8):891-899. doi: 10.1007/s11606-017-4059-1. Epub 2017 May 3.
Benzodiazepines and benzodiazepine-receptor agonists (BDZRAs, often known as "Z-drugs") are commonly used in older adults despite well-documented harms.
To evaluate patterns of benzodiazepine and BDZRA use in Israel, focusing on potential leverage points where quality improvement initiatives might effectively curtail new use or the transition from intermittent to chronic use.
We used national electronic medical data to assess a 10% random sample of adults receiving care in Clalit Health Services, which serves half of Israel's population. The sample included 267,221 adults, of whom 56,808 (21%) were age 65 and older.
Medication use from 2013 to 2015 was ascertained using pharmacy dispensing data.
In 2014, 7% of adults age 21-64 and 32% of adults age 65 and older received at least one benzodiazepine/BDZRA, including 49% of adults age 85 and older (P < 0.001). The majority of older users (59%) were long-term users of the drugs, and 21% of older adults who were short-term users in 2014 transitioned to medium- or long-term use in 2015. Older Arab Israelis were much less likely to receive benzodiazepine/BDZRAs than older Jewish Israelis (adjusted OR 0.28, 95% 0.25-0.31), but within each community there was no major variation in prescribing rates across clinics. Depression diagnosis was associated with particularly high rates of benzodiazepine/BDZRA use: 17% of older adults with depression received a benzodiazepine/BDZRA but no antidepressant, and 42% received both. Recent hospitalization increased the risk of new benzodiazepine/BDZRA use (adjusted OR 1.41, 95% CI 1.01-1.96), but the absolute risk increase was only 3%.
Benzodiazepines/BDZRAs are used at exceptionally high rates by older Israeli adults, especially the oldest old. Important leverage points for quality improvement efforts include curtailing the transition from short-term to long-term use, reducing use in older adults with depression, and identifying reasons that explain large differences in benzodiazepine/BDZRA prescribing between different ethnic groups.
尽管有充分记录的危害,但苯二氮䓬类药物和苯二氮䓬受体激动剂(BDZRAs,通常称为“Z类药物”)在老年人中仍被广泛使用。
评估以色列苯二氮䓬类药物和BDZRA的使用模式,重点关注质量改进举措可能有效减少新使用或从间歇使用转变为长期使用的潜在杠杆点。
我们使用国家电子医疗数据评估了在Clalit健康服务机构接受治疗的10%成年随机样本,该机构服务于以色列一半的人口。样本包括267,221名成年人,其中56,808名(21%)年龄在65岁及以上。
使用药房配药数据确定2013年至2015年的用药情况。
2014年,21至64岁的成年人中有7%以及65岁及以上的成年人中有32%至少接受过一种苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA,其中85岁及以上的成年人中有49%(P < 0.001)。大多数老年使用者(59%)是这些药物的长期使用者,2014年为短期使用者的老年人中有21%在2015年转变为中长期使用者。以色列阿拉伯裔老年人接受苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA的可能性远低于以色列犹太裔老年人(调整后的比值比为0.28,95%置信区间为0.25 - 0.31),但在每个社区内,各诊所的处方率没有重大差异。抑郁症诊断与苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA的特别高使用率相关:17%患有抑郁症的老年人接受了苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA但未接受抗抑郁药,42%两者都接受了。近期住院增加了新使用苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA的风险(调整后的比值比为1.41,95%置信区间为1.01 - 1.96),但绝对风险增加仅为3%。
以色列老年成年人中苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRAs的使用率极高,尤其是最年长的老年人。质量改进工作的重要杠杆点包括减少从短期使用到长期使用的转变、减少抑郁症老年患者的使用,以及找出解释不同种族群体之间苯二氮䓬类药物/BDZRA处方存在巨大差异的原因。