1st Edition

Elderly People, Their Medicines, and Their Doctors

By Ann Cartwright, Christopher Smith Copyright 1988
208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

In the late 1980s, an increasing proportion of all prescribed medicines went to people over 65 years of age, not only because they constituted a growing sector of the population but also because their consumption rate, unlike that of younger people was increasing. This increase was therefore a matter for widespread concern which had until now been largely speculative, as no recent national survey... Read more

Acknowledgements.  1. Introduction  Part 1: The Medicines  2. Prescribed Medicines Taken and Kept by the Elderly People  3. Assessments and Prescribing  4. Who Takes the Prescribed Medicines?  5. Over-the-Counter Medicines  Part 2: The Doctors  6. The Relationship between Elderly People and their General Practitioners  7. General Practitioners’ Experience and Knowledge of Particular Patients  8. Variations between Doctors  9. In Conclusion  Part 3: Appendices  1. The Sample of Elderly People  2. The Sample of General Practitioners  3. The Classification of Medicines  4. The Confused  5. The Helpers and the Helped  6. Statistical Significance and Sampling Errors.  References.  Name Index.  Subject Index.

Biography

Ann Cartwright and Christopher Smith