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Stop use of drugs treating dementia

Hundreds of Australian dementia sufferers are dying unnecessarily each year because of the overuse of antipsychotic drugs, an international health expert has warned. Professor Sube Banerjee, a dementia expert from King’s College London, estimated about 700 dementia patients were dying prematurely.

Posted
by DPS

Hundreds of Australian dementia sufferers are dying unnecessarily each year because of the overuse of antipsychotic drugs, an international health expert has warned.

Professor Sube Banerjee, a dementia expert from King’s College London, estimated about 700 dementia patients were dying prematurely every year in Australia because antipsychotic drugs were being overused by health professionals to treat the illness.

Addressing an Alzheimer’s Australia seminar in Sydney this week, he said health systems worldwide were “failing people with dementia” by overprescribing antipsychotic drugs for behaviour control in patients.

“You’ve got about 280,000 people with dementia in Australia and that equates to about 700 deaths per year if you’re using your drugs at the same levels that we are in the UK,” Professor Banerjee said.

He said, in the United Kingdom, about 1,800 dementia patients died each year directly as a result of reactions to antipsychotic drugs.

Earlier, the seminar heard more than one million prescriptions for antipsychotic medications were made last year for people over 67 years.

There were four million prescriptions written for antidepressants for those over 67 years.

This year’s federal budget contained $268 million over five years to assist the 1.5 million Australians living with dementia.

But the seminar was told more was needed to be done to address an increasing dementia burden among Australia’s ageing population.

University of NSW dementia expert, Henry Brodaty, said there were less risky ways to treat the behavioural symptoms of dementia like wandering and swearing than by simply prescribing antipsychotics.

Mr Brodaty suggested treatments such as animal-assisted therapy, humour therapy and having patients live in small groups would be preferred methods.

Are you against the use of antipsychotic drugs to treat dementia patients? Share your thoughts by commenting in the box below.

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