A rampant prescription, a hidden peril - Boston.com - 0 views
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Ledgewood is one of many nursing homes that have commonly used antipsychotic drugs to control agitation and combative behavior in residents who should not be receiving the powerful sedatives.
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Federal data show that roughly 185,000 nursing home residents in the United States received antipsychotics in 2010 contrary to federal nursing home regulators’ recommendations
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The drugs, which are intended to treat severe mental illness such as schizophrenia, can leave people in a stupor. The US Food and Drug Administration has issued black-box warnings - the agency’s most serious medication alert - about potentially fatal side effects when antipsychotics are taken by patients with dementia.
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From elsewhere in the article: more than one in five nursing homes in the United States, antipsychotics are administered to a significant percentage of residents despite the fact that they do not have a psychosis or related condition that nursing home regulators say warrants their use There is a clear link between the rate of antipsychotic use in a nursing home and its staffing level. state inspectors rarely cite homes for overprescribing antipsychotics. Until 2006, there was a specific citation for overuse of antipsychotics, but that year officials folded that citation into a more generic "unnecessary medication use'' category that pertains to all medicines.