Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

HOME

Articles by KDR

Canadians Should Pay NOT to be Poisoned: NDP

V for Vendetta - R for Reality

Canadian Bird Flu Pandemic Looming ?

Shill of the Week: Stephan Harper

Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer

Chicken Little Terrorist of the Week: Creating Fake Terrorists

Shill of the Week: Paul Martin

The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Bonus

HIV=AIDS - Fact of Fraud
The Real Face Of The European Union
Loose Change 2
The Masters of the Universe
Bill Hicks on the Elite
Sweet Misery

Drug Reactions Send 700,000 Yearly to ER

LINDSEY TANNER - AP
October 20, 2006

Health [KDR: 43% of Americans are on prescription drugs. A very healthy country.]

Harmful reactions to some of the most widely used medicines -- from insulin to a common antibiotic -- sent more than 700,000 Americans to emergency rooms each year, landmark government research shows.

Accidental overdoses and allergic reactions to prescription drugs were the most frequent cause of serious illnesses, according to the study, the first to reveal the nationwide scope of the problem. People over 65 faced the greatest risks.

"This is an important study because it reinforces the really substantial risks that there are in everyday use of drugs," said patient safety specialist Bruce Lambert, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago's college of pharmacy.

Even so, the study authors and other experts agreed that the 700,000 estimate was conservative because bad drug reactions are likely often misdiagnosed.

The study found that a small group of pharmaceutical warhorses were most commonly implicated, including insulin for diabetes; warfarin for clotting problems; and amoxicillin, a penicillin-like antibiotic used for all kinds of infections.

"These are old drugs which are known to be extremely effective. We could not and would not want to live without them. But you've got to get the dose exactly right. Variations, especially on the high side, are really dangerous," Lambert said. He was not involved in the research.

Those aged 65 and older faced more than double the risk of requiring emergency room treatment and were nearly seven times more likely to be admitted to the hospital than younger patients.

The results, from 2004-05, represent the first two years of data from a national surveillance project on outpatient drug safety. The project was developed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. The study was published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

The database included 63 nationally representative hospitals that reported 21,298 bad drug reactions among U.S. adults and children treated in emergency rooms during the two-year period. The tally is based on what emergency room doctors said were complications from using prescription drugs, over-the-counter medicines, dietary supplements or herbal treatments.

The researchers said it translates to 701,547 complications nationwide each year.

Read the full article here

Broken Link? If the link to the original article is broken or has been altered you can view the article by clicking here.

Maple Leaf Footer
About KDR | | Home | | Weekly Features Archive

Weekly

Quote: RFID Airport Tag Shill: Natural Resources Minister Gary Lunn Chicken Little Terrorist: Homegrown Terror Dumbass: Stephen Harper's Wife
Weekly Features Archive

In Depth

What Is Wrong With Canada
What Is Wrong With Canada ?


Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media
Recent 9-11 News Suppressed by the Media


Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer
Aspartame: The Sweetest Killer


Number 1 Reason YOU Are a Slave
The Number 1 Reason YOU became a Slave


Liberal Party Logo Conservative Party Logo New Democrat Party Logo
Knowledge Driven Look at Your Favourite Canadian Political Parties

Archive

August
September

October 2006

01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Weekly Features
2006
2005


Read Today's Knowledge Driven News

About KDR

KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com

Counter

Copyright © 2005-6 KnowledgeDrivenRevolution.com