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Active Not Recruiting
NCT05756400
Polypharmacy Among Internal Medicine Patients
Conditions: Internal Medicine
Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – N/A
Enrollment: 85942
Sponsor: University of Iceland
Location: Iceland
Summary
The World Health Organisation Patient Safety Challenge: Medication Without Harm has brought our attention to the importance of medication-related harm as a global public health issue.
One of the major contributing factors is polypharmacy, the usage of multiple medicines at the same time.
People are getting older and living longer with chronic diseases; they need more medications, which frequently leads to polypharmacy.
Subsequently, they are at more risk of medication-related harm.
The planned project is an epidemiological study on polypharmacy, medication appropriateness, risk factors, and clinical outcomes post-discharge from a hospital for internal medicine patients.The study group hypothesise that pre- and post-admission polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing is common, especially among older patients, patients with a high comorbidity and frailty burden.
Our hypothesis is additionally that preadmission polypharmacy and potentially inappropriate prescribing is associated with higher short- and long-term mortality, a longer primary hospitalization length of stay, and a higher risk of readmission.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:Population-based cohort study that included all patients ≥18 years hospitalized in internal medicine ward at Landspitali - The National University Hospital of Iceland during the study period 1st January 2010 and 31st December 2020Exclusion Criteria:Under 18 years of age
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05756400). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.