There is wide variation in different regions in the intensity of fracture-associated drug (FAD) use among long-term care facility residents.

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"In our previous research, we showed that combining three or more FADs carried up to a four-fold risk of hip fracture for Medicare beneficiaries, and that exposure to these medications for residents of long-term care facilities was nearly twice that of those living in the community setting," says Rebecca Emeny, PhD, MPH, a research scientist at The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and lead author on the study.
In this study, the investigators sought to determine how much regional variation exists in the intensity of FAD use (from a list of 21 FADs) in long-term care facilities and to assess the association between this intensity and hip fracture rates.
They analyzed Medicare administrative data and the prescription records of 422,111 long-term care residents, comparing FAD use across hospital referral regions, and observed more than 36,409 hip fractures among these residents over an eight-year period (2006-2014).
Areas with the greatest multiple FAD use intensity (with at least three FADs prescribed) were in the southeast, in Gulfport and Oxford, Mississippi; Alexandria and Monroe, Louisiana; and Miami, Florida; while the lowest intensity areas were in Bronx, New York; Bend, Oregon; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Honolulu, Hawaii; and Sun City, Arizona.
"Seeing such variation in the intensity of prescribing of these risky drugs across this vulnerable population adds to the evidence that guidelines aren't necessarily being followed," says Emeny.
Source-Eurekalert
MEDINDIA

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