1.Quality of life of elderly patients with polypharmacy in the out-patient department of a tertiary hospital
The Filipino Family Physician 2021;59(1):86-91
Background:
Quality of Life (QoL) is an indicator of an elderly patient’s health status in achieving optimum care. However, no available local studies focused on QoL in elderly patients with polypharmacy. Better knowledge on this may help healthcare practitioners design and modify interventions that will suit elderly patients’ needs to improve both care and well-being. This study examined the QoL of elderly patients with polypharmacy and evaluated its relationship with demographic and clinical profile.
Methods:
A descriptive cross-sectional study was done among 333 elderly patients with polypharmacy seen at Region 1 Medical Center-Family and Community Medicine Out-Patient Department (R1MC-FCM OPD) from January to June 2019 using a self-administered EuroQoL-5 Dimension 5-Level (EQ-5D-5L) questionnaire to elicit the domains of QoL. The following statistical tests were utilized: Frequency count and percentage for analyzing gathered data; Spearman’s rank correlation for determining correlation between ordinal and continuous variables; and Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis H tests for comparison of mean ranks. All analyses were performed using SPSS version 25.
Results:
Majority of the respondents were 60-69 years old (59.5%), female (55.3%), married (65.5%), attained at least elementary level education (38%), diagnosed with two illnesses (53%), taking four medications (65.5%) with an average monthly income below Php 10,000.00 (82.6%). Most of the respondents reported “no problems” in all five dimensions of EQ-5D-5L; however, decrease in usual activities (49.8%), pain (49.5%), and mobility (39%) were noted to be the common problems. Lower EQ-5D index and EQ-Visual Analogue Scale (EQ-VAS) scores were observed among respondents aged 80-90 years old, attained at least elementary level education, with three diagnosed illnesses, taking more than four medications, suffering mild cognitive impairment, partially dependent on activities in daily living, and mildly depressed (p <0.05).
Conclusion
The quality of life was reduced in the ageing population with low educational attainment, polypharmacy, multimorbidity, functional incapacity, cognitive impairment, and emotional problem.
Quality of Life
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Polypharmacy
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Outpatients
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Tertiary Care Centers