Since the "National Partnership to Improve Dementia Care" debuted in 2012, almost all long-stay psychoactive prescribing has been graded by CMS, which has correlated to decreased use. However, some national data suggest that while these psychoactive medications are being used less, prescriptions of mood-stabilizing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) have increased. Unlike all other psychoactive medications, AEDs prescribed in nursing homes are not mandatorily reported to CMS or graded in a quality-measure.
Pilot studies from Virginia suggest increases in AEDs are concentrated entirely in dementia patients with no diagnosis of epilepsy and as a purposeful unmonitored alternative to antipsychotics. AEDs are not FDA approved for dementia symptoms, have weak efficacy evidence, and convey serious risk. Increasingly it seems likely that the Partnership's debut was an inflection point where the trend towards unmonitored alternative drugs for dementia symptoms sharply increased. Early Commonwealth data hints that the COVID pandemic represents a second critical point of inflection where the existing transition towards non-superior but unreported drugs is again rapidly accelerating. All outcomes associated with this evolving prescribing phenomenon remain unknown. That said, pilot data suggests that harms may be increasing without benefit, a development with relevance to all invested in improving dementia care including patients, caregivers, and policy makers.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
22,500,000
This intervention requires the following procedures: Submitting data use agreement, MDS request defined and developed, Part D request, CMS public use file request defines and develop questionnaire
Procedures include: Access VRDC for 2 years, Crosswalk CMS files and MDS using ID's, Preliminary analysis for validity/accuracy, Request revision/resubmission, Linked dataset created in VRDC and Distribute Questionnaire
Procedures include: De-identified data securely stored, analysis, dissemination and knowledge translation
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, Virginia, United States
Quarterly rate of use and mean dose of AEDs in US nursing homes
Quarterly rate of use and mean dose of AEDs in US nursing homes 2009-2021
Time frame: The years 2009 to 2021
Quarterly rate of use of AEDs in US nursing homes for long-stay residents
Quarterly rate of use of AEDs in US nursing homes for long-stay residents with and without: dementia, seizure-epilepsy, psychiatric diagnoses, neuropathic pain, an appropriate diagnosis for AED use
Time frame: The years 2009 to 2012
Quarterly rate of adverse health events among US nursing home residents prescribed or not prescribed AEDs
Quarterly rate of adverse health events among US nursing home residents prescribed or not prescribed AEDs from 2009 to 2021. Adverse health events include: * Detrimental nursing home outcomes including falls, cognitive scores, functional scores, harmful behaviors, weight loss, hospice, death * ER encounters (per 1000 nursing home days) * Hospitalizations (per 1000 nursing home days), potentially avoidable hospitalizations, medication related hospitalizations, costs of hospital care.
Time frame: The years 2009 to 2021
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