Geriatric emergency medication safety recommendations: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
*Consensus guidelines with alternative medications for geriatric medication use upon discharge from the ED.


===High-Risk Medications to Avoid for Geriatric Patients at ED Discharge<ref>Skains, et al. Geriatric Emergency Medication Safety Recommendations (GEMS-Rx). Annals of Emergency Medicine. September 2024. 84(3):274-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.01.033</ref>===
===High-Risk Medications to Avoid for Geriatric Patients at ED Discharge<ref>Skains, et al. Geriatric Emergency Medication Safety Recommendations (GEMS-Rx). Annals of Emergency Medicine. September 2024. 84(3):274-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.01.033</ref>===
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|Skeletal muscle relaxants
|[[Skeletal muscle relaxants]]
*Examples: [[Baclofen]] (Lioresal), [[dantrolene]] (Dantrium), [[cyclobenzaprine]] (Amrix)
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*Treat musculoskeletal pain first with nonpharmacologic agents (eg, heat, ice, massage) then with Tylenol, short-course NSAIDs, lidocaine patch, diclofenac gel.
*Treat musculoskeletal pain first with nonpharmacologic agents (e.g., heat, ice, massage) then with [[acetaminophen]], short-course [[NSAIDs]], [[lidocaine]] patch, [[diclofenac]] gel.
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|[[Sulfonylureas]]
|[[Sulfonylureas]]
|Metformin, long-acting insulin (eg, glargine).
*Examples: [[Glipizide]], [[glyburide]]
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*[[Metformin]], long-acting [[insulin]] (e.g., [[glargine]])
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==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Geriatrics (main)]]
*[[Geriatrics (main)]]
==References==

Latest revision as of 23:32, 20 May 2026

Background

  • Consensus guidelines with alternative medications for geriatric medication use upon discharge from the ED.

High-Risk Medications to Avoid for Geriatric Patients at ED Discharge[1]

High-Risk Therapeutic Class (AVOID) Alternative Options (Preferred) Valid Exceptions^ (Use with Caution)
Barbiturates
Benzodiazepines
First-generation antihistamines
Metoclopramide
First-generation antipsychotics
Nonbenzodiazepines (Z-drugs)
Skeletal muscle relaxants
Sulfonylureas

^Indications for use where high-risk medication benefit may outweigh risks.

See Also

References

  1. Skains, et al. Geriatric Emergency Medication Safety Recommendations (GEMS-Rx). Annals of Emergency Medicine. September 2024. 84(3):274-284. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2024.01.033