rX My Heart and Hope to Die
This must be a mistake! How could his drug costs rise from $150 a month to $1101 in just three weeks? My hands shook while I read the pharmacy bill.
There was no mistake. The bill I held recorded the drugs ordered by my fathers Alzheimers' care unit. In only three weeks at this eldercare facility, his drug expenses had soared an incredible 734%. Ironically, his quality of life had plunged about the same percent. Walking and talking when he entered, he now spent his days confined to a wheelchair, unable to walk, drugged into a persistent stupor.
"I've got to do something." The thought haunted me all day.
Then, that evening, an incidental trip to the grocery delivered the help I needed. It came in the form of a thick paperback book, The PDR Pocket Guide to Prescription Drugs (PDR Pocket Guide).
The PDR Pocket Guide provides tons of information for all prescription drugs on the market when it was printed. Specifics include:
- generic equivalents,
- why the drug is prescribed,
- how it should be taken,
- when it should not be taken,
- side effects and special warning, and
- possible interactions with other drugs and food.
The PDR Pocket Guide is available through Amazon.com, or you might find a copy like I did at your local grocery or bookstore. Jam-packed with almost 1700 pages of information, this paperback is a surprisingly affordable $6.99.
Using the pharmacy's bill as a list of medications, I read the PDR report for each drug my father was using. What I found astonished me.
Two of fifteen drugs prescribed were being used "off-label" (not FDA approved for the condition it is used to treat). One of those was specifically contraindicated for use with Alzheimer's patients. Two more were from drug families that I had previously identified as causing allergic reactions in my father.
When I was young, my father used to kid me by saying, "Up with this I will not put!" Up with this I wasn't about to put either, so I called his doctor.
"My father is allergic to Furosemide."
He bristled. "Where did you get an idea like that?"
"Furosemide is a sulfa drug. He's allergic to sulfa drugs."
"I never heard anything like that about Furosemide," he barked. "Who told you that?"
"The PDR Pocket Guide."
"Well, the PDR has a lot of stuff you don't need to know." His arrogance grated on my nerves.
"No more Furosemide." Now I wasn't asking, I was demanding. "You've seen his rash. He didn't have it when he came to the care unit."
"You're not qualified to say what he should or should not have."
"What am I doing," I wondered, "arguing with a doctor who should be helping?" I wish I'd spoken the words I thought next. "Bye-bye! You're fired!"
But, in that moment, I resolved to be fully in control of all my father's drugs. I would learn everything I could and provide drugs direct to the facility. . .or not. There would be no more ordering drugs without my specific authorization
I enlisted the expertise of a pharmacist I found just down the street. She graciously took time from her crowded day to answer all my questions and explain anything I didn't understand. She took a brief history of my father's illness, made note of his allergies, and offered money-saving suggestions. She focused on providing excellent service. In short, she was, and is, an angel.
I immediately began to look for another physician to take over my father's care, but I was too slow. Within a few weeks, my father died of complications from a massive insulin overdose.
Was my experience unusual? Probably not, according to a study from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). On the subject of the increased cost of pharmaceuticals for people over-65, the study's author, Marie Stagnitti, MPA, reports:
Every year from 1997-2000, the average out of pocket expense for prescription medicines for those with a purchase and age 65 and older was more than three times as high as the average out of pocket expense on prescription medicines for those with a purchase and under age 65.
The potential for overmedication in the elderly is clear in Stagnitti's chart showing an average 23.5 prescriptions in both 1999 and 2000 for the over-65 group that used prescription drugs. The number of prescription drugs used by the under-65 group seemed high to me as well: 9.5 for 1999 and 10.1 prescriptions for the year 2000.
Overmedication is not only crushingly expensive for our elderly, it represents a real and present danger. You can do something about it. Please, learn about and oversee medications. You will help elders save money. You might even save a life.
About The Author
A native Texas, Phyllis Staff lives in Dallas with her family. She is a writer and photographer whose work has appeared in scholarly journals and popular magazines. She is the CEO of thebestisyet.net (http://www.thebestisyet.net) and author of How to Find Great Senior Housing: A Roadmap for Elders and Those Who Love Them (2nd edition).
Latest News
MEDICINE CABINET: Options for treating inflamed salivary glands Newsday, NY - I've been diagnosed with inflamed salivary glands. I've lived with this condition for almost five years. I have had some glands removed and have been tested ... |
First Graduates of FSU College of Medicine Now Practicing Physicians WCTV, FL - Fourteen members of the first class of students to graduate from The Florida State University College of Medicine recently completed the journey to becoming ... |
![]() Telegraph.co.uk | Strong medicine Financial Times, UK - The European Commission is right to criticise drugmakers’ practice of extending their monopolies on high cost medicines by keeping out low-cost generic ... Drug firms 'block' cheap medicine EU report: Drug makers block market entry of competing medicines Competition inquiry accuses drug firms of patent clustering |
Dr. Bill Hopper named MediCall Medical Director MarketWatch - Dr. Hopper's more than three decades of clinical experience has included medical management, emergency medicine, solo rural family medicine, medical groups, ... Med school dean at UND to step down Protein Attributed to Membrane Repair Identified - Mechanism May ... USA Today Examines No-Cost Prescription Drug Samples |
Incorporating Patient Preferences in Evidence-Based Medicine Journal of American Medical Association (subscription), IL - However, their contention that the focus of guidelines on evidence-based medicine (EBM) is responsible for a delay in making values and preferences ... Incorporating Patient Preferences in Evidence-Based Medicine—Reply |
Insurance commissioner to investigate ‘concierge’ medicine ... IFAwebnews.com, MD - By Bob Graham Maryland Insurance Commissioner Ralph S. Tyler plans to investigate whether the growing use of “concierge” medicine practices trigger ... |
![]() CBS News | China Medicine Corporation Awarded GSP Certification Pharmaceutical Online (press release), PA - In conjunction with China Medicine's success in obtaining the GSP certification, the Company will also be considered by the Guangdong FDA to include ... Morning-after Pill More Accessible After FDA Decision The FDA ... |
![]() Wall Street Journal Blogs | AASM responds to the Institute of Medicine's report on fatigue and ... EurekAlert (press release), DC - WESTCHESTER, Ill. – The American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) commends the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies (IOM) for its independent ... Revised Hours And Workloads For Medical Residents Needed To Reduce ... Young Doctors Still Too Tired When Treating Patients, Study Says New Report Recommends Strategies to Reduce Medical Resident ... |
Climate change: illness and medicine The Coloradoan, CO - These policy prescriptions, such as deploying renewable energy, are essentially the medicines proposed to combat the problem of global warming. ... |
![]() Voice of America | Effort in Senegal to Join Traditional & Conventional Medicine Voice of America - By Scott Bobb Traditional medicine was once thought of as sorcery or quackery. But the craft is slowly gaining the respect of conventional medical ... |
Resources
-
Sorry Currently Unavailable



