Pubdate: 1 Mar 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Darren Gray PRESCRIPTIONS PUT 80,000 IN HOSPITAL: STUDY More than 80,000 people are taken to hospital each year because of adverse drug reactions, many of them avoidable, according to a study released today in the Journal of Quality in Clinical Practice. Cardiovascular drugs, antibiotics, blood-thinning drugs and anti-inflammatory drugs were the main pharmaceuticals linked with adverse reactions in a study by Ms Libby Roughead, a pharmacist at the school of pharmacy and medical science, at the University of South Australia. The drugs were implicated in serious illnesses such as gastrointestinal bleeding, heart failure, immunosuppresion, potentially fatal heartbeat abnormalities and seizures. It has been estimated that between 32 per cent and 69 per cent of all medication-related hospital cases are avoidable. Ms Roughead reviewed 14 medical studies in her report and found that between 2.4 per cent and 3.6 per cent of all Australian public hospital admissions were likely to be drug-related. ``Medication-related hospital admissions are a significant public health problem in Australia,'' Ms Roughead said. Adverse drug reactions were an enormous economic cost to the health system, costing hundreds of millions of dollars a year, she said. Another study in the journal estimated that such events in health-care management cost hospitals $900 million a year. Including adverse events at nursing homes and in general and specialist practice, the total cost of adverse events would be closer to $1.2 billion, estimated the researchers, from the Australian Patient Safety Foundation. ``This is an amount equal to that estimated for all other forms of injury combined,'' they said. The researchers also reported that hospital admissions from an adverse drug or health treatment cost more, on average, than other admissions. They estimated how much specific adverse events cost the health system each year: surgical wound infections cost nearly $140 million; hospital admissions for gastrointestinal bleeds caused by anti-inflammatory drugs cost $30 million; unnecessary operations cost $29 million; falls in hospitals cost $2.1 million. A 1992 study of more than 14,000 medical records found 2353 adverse events. Meanwhile, a study by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners found that 50 per cent of adverse events in general practice were drug-related. In hospitals, it is believed that 20per cent of adverse events are drug related. Dr Chris Hogan, the Victorian chairman of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, said a wide range of factors contributed to adverse drug reactions and health events. ``There are several ways that these things can be avoided,'' he said. ``The first thing is that if each doctor who treats a patient is fully aware of all the medications a patient is taking - including over-the-counter and natural medicines. Too many patient did not actually know what medication they were on, he said. Other adverse reactions occurred because people took someone else's pills or expired medication, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski