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Showing posts from September, 2025

Empowering medical students to manage polypharmacy

Polypharmacy, commonly defined as the concurrent use of five or more medications, is a growing challenge in modern healthcare, especially among older adults with multiple long-term conditions. While advances in medicine have improved disease management, they have also led to an unintended consequence: a rising medication burden that can harm patient well-being.  Our recent study published in Clinical Practice explores how reframing polypharmacy as a chronic condition can empower future doctors to manage it more effectively. For example, polypharmacy substantially increases the risk of adverse drug reactions (ADRs). This underscores the urgent need for a shift in how we approach medication management.  Traditional medical education focuses on treating individual diseases, often leading to prescribing cascades where one drug’s side effect triggers another prescription. This cycle complicates care and worsens outcomes. We designed a three-phase educational intervention for final-...