Antibiotics Overused in Patients with Dementia

According to the report published in the February 25 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals, more than 5 million Americans have dementia. And about 70 percent of them will live in nursing homes at the end of their lives. Recurrent infections and fever are common among these patients, who may receive antibiotics to treat these conditions.
The study included 214 residents (average age 85.2) with advanced dementia living in 21 area nursing homes. The participants underwent an initial assessment between 2003 and 2006 and then were examined every three months for a maximum of 18 months. At each evaluation, the number of courses of antibiotic therapy prescribed since the prior visit was obtained from facility records.
Of those residents, 142 (66.4 percent) received at least one course of antibiotics and the overall average was four courses. Of the 99 (46.3 percent) residents who died, 42 (42.4 percent) received antibiotics during the two weeks before their death during an average of 322 days of follow-up.
“This extensive use of antimicrobials and pattern of antimicrobial management in advanced dementia raises concerns not only with respect to individual treatment burden near the end of life but also with respect to the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance in the nursing home setting,” the authors write. The results support “the development of programs and guidelines designed to reduce the use of antimicrobial agents in advanced dementia.”

Source: JAMA

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