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Older women slipping through cracks of conventional medicine, study says

WASHINGTON (June 4, 1998 09:20 a.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) -- An alarming
number of women over age 59 are addicted to psychoactive prescription drugs
and alcohol, and only a few physicians are catching the early signs of abuse,
according to a new study by Columbia University.

The 180-page report, being released Thursday by Columbia's National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse, said 11 percent of older women -- 2.8 million
-- abuse or are addicted to psychoactive prescription drugs.

About 1.8 million or 7 percent of older women abuse or are addicted to
alcohol.

The two-year study also concluded that less than 1 percent of the women who
need treatment for alcohol abuse receive it.

"In good health, these women can work, be supportive parents and loving
grandparents and have two decades of independent living ahead of them," said
Joseph A. Califano Jr., president of the Columbia substance abuse center.

"Substance abuse and addiction steal millions of these years by condemning
thousands of these women to disability and premature death."

As part of its study, the center reviewed prescriptions for psychoactive --
mood altering -- drugs given to 13,000 mature women over a six-month period.

The report concluded that half of the prescriptions for tranquilizers and
sleeping pills should not have been given or should have been given for
shorter periods of time.

One in four women use at least one psychoactive prescription drug, according
to the study.

The report also pointed to doctors not recognizing symptoms of abuse among
their older female patients.

Only one percent of primary care physicians considered a substance abuse
diagnosis when presented with common symptoms of alcohol abuse.

Instead, 80 percent diagnosed the symptoms as depression.

"What's inexcusable is that these tragedies are preventable," said Califano.

Former first lady Betty Ford joined Califano in calling the situation a
"hidden" epidemic, with older women reluctant to come forward because of
society's stigmas, and family members denying the signs of abuse.

"It is swept under the rug of denial and desperation of families and friends
who can't accept the reality of a mother or aunt or sister who may be abusing
alcohol or addicted to it or who simply don't know what to do about it," Ford
said.

The report suggested that physicians can spend as little as five minutes
counseling patients deemed at risk to help prevent the problem.

It also recommended increased training for physicians on how to recognize and
address substance abuse.

The study was based on an analysis of several national surveys, including the
Health and Retirement Study conducted by the Survey Research Center at the
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and the National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse sponsored by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration in the Health and Human Services Department.

The physician survey was conducted independently by Louis Harris & Associates.
The telephone survey of 400 physicians had a margin of error of plus or minus
3 to 5 percentage points.

By Kalpana Srinivasan
Copyright 1998 Nando.net
Copyright 1998 The Associated Press

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