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Study Questions Antibiotics Use for Advanced Dementia Patients |
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Study Questions Antibiotics Use for Advanced Dementia
Patients
Nearly half of advanced-dementia residents in
nursing faculties receive antibiotics during the last two weeks of life, but it
remains unclear whether such treatment helps, according to a new study from
Harvard-affiliated researchers reporting in the Archives
of Internal Medicine.
Pain from administering the drugs intravenously, as well as unwanted side
effects, are among the chief concerns. Extensive use of antimicrobials and
pattern of antimicrobial management in advanced dementia raises concerns not
only with respect to individual treatment burden near the end of life but also
with respect to the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance in the
nursing facility setting, according to the report, which recommends development
of programs and guidelines designed to reduce the use of antimicrobial agents
in advanced dementia. The study followed 200 Boston nursing facility residents
with dementia for about 18 months. Nearly three-fourths of the five million
Americans with dementia will require nursing facility care. Commonly
complicating their stays are repeated infections and fevers, experts said,
adding that more research is needed to learn whether physicians ultimately
should consider not recommending antibiotics. Alternatives such as oxygen or
Tylenol could be better courses of treatment, according to one expert.
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