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The Norwegian General Practice (NORGEP) criteria for assessing potentially inappropriate prescriptions to elderly patients: A modified Delphi study

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TLDR
The NORGEP criteria may serve as rules of thumb for general practitioners related to their prescribing practice for elderly patients, and as a tool for evaluating the quality of GPs’ prescribing in settings where access to clinical information for individual patients is limited, e.g. in prescription databases and quality improvement interventions.
Abstract
Objective. To establish a clinically relevant list with explicit criteria for pharmacologically inappropriate prescriptions in general practice for elderly people ≥70 years. Design. A three-round Delphi process for validating the clinical relevance of suggested criteria (n = 37) for inappropriate prescriptions to elderly patients. Setting. A postal consensus process undertaken by a panel of specialists in general practice, clinical pharmacology, and geriatrics. Main outcome measures. The Norwegian General Practice (NORGEP) criteria, a relevance-validated list of drugs, drug dosages, and drug combinations to be avoided in the elderly (≤70 years) patients. Results. Of the 140 invited panellists, 57 accepted to participate and 47 completed all three rounds of the Delphi process. The panellists reached consensus that 36 of the 37 suggested criteria were clinically relevant for general practice. Relevance of three of the criteria was rated significantly higher in Round 3 than in Round 1. At the end of the Delp...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Basic and Clinical Pharmacology

Howard S. Pitkow
- 15 Jul 1983 - 
TL;DR: This book succeeds Review of Medical Pharmacology, by Meyers, Jawetz, and Goldfien, and deals with relevant information regarding the clinical use of drugs on the various battlefields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potentially Inappropriate Medications in the Elderly: The PRISCUS List

TL;DR: The validity and practicability of the PRISCUS list remain to be demonstrated and should be used as a component of an overall concept for geriatric pharmacotherapy in which polypharmacy and interacting medications are avoided, and doses are regularly re-evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inappropriate prescribing: criteria, detection and prevention.

TL;DR: The inappropriate prescribing detection tools or criteria most frequently cited in the literature are described and examined and their role in preventing inappropriate prescribing and other related healthcare outcomes are examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potentially inappropriate prescribing in community-dwelling older people across Europe: a systematic literature review

TL;DR: Polypharmacy, poor functional status, and depression were identified as the most common risk factors for PIP and it appears that only PIP prevalence calculated from insurance data significantly differs from the other data collection method categories.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple diseases and polypharmacy in the elderly: challenges for the internist of the third millennium.

TL;DR: A review discusses how internists might tackle the new challenges of the aging population and the development of new approaches in the frame of undergraduate and postgraduate training and of clinical research is essential to improve and implement suitable strategies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Research guidelines for the Delphi survey technique.

TL;DR: This paper aims to provide an understanding of the preparation, action steps and difficulties that are inherent within the Delphi method, used systematically and rigorously, to contribute significantly to broadening knowledge within the nursing profession.
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Updating the Beers criteria for potentially inappropriate medication use in older adults: results of a US consensus panel of experts.

TL;DR: The application of the Beers criteria and other tools for identifying potentially inappropriate medication use will continue to enable providers to plan interventions for decreasing both drug-related costs and overall costs and thus minimize drug- related problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consensus methods: characteristics and guidelines for use.

TL;DR: The characteristics of several major methods (Delphi, Nominal Group, and models developed by the National Institutes of Health and Glaser) are surveyed and guidelines for those who want to use the techniques are provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Explicit Criteria for Determining Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use by the Elderly: An Update

TL;DR: In this article, a panel of experts agreed on the validity of 28 criteria describing the potentially inappropriate use of medication by general populations of the elderly as well as 35 criteria defining potentially inappropriate medication use in older persons known to have any of 15 common medical conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Explicit criteria for determining inappropriate medication use in nursing home residents. UCLA Division of Geriatric Medicine.

TL;DR: 30 factors agreed on by this method identify inappropriate use of such commonly used categories of medications as sedative-hypnotics, antidepressants, antipsychotics, antihypertensives, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, oral hypoglycemics, dementia treatments, platelet inhibitors, histamine2 blockers, antibiotics, decongestants, iron supplements, muscle relaxants, gastrointestinal antispasmodics, and antiemetics.
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