About 15 percent of adults taking ibuprofen (Motrin, Advil) or other
NSAIDs like aspirin, naproxen (Aleve), celecoxib (Celebrex),
meloxicam (Mobic) and diclofenac (Voltaren) exceeded the maximum
recommended daily dose for these drugs, the study found.
“NSAIDs are among the most commonly used medicines in the U.S. and
worldwide,” said lead study author Dr. David Kaufman of Boston
University.
“These drugs can have serious side effects, including
gastrointestinal bleeding and heart attacks, and are often taken
without medical oversight because many products are available
over-the-counter,” Kaufman said by email. “The attitude that users
can choose their own dose regardless of label directions, along with
poor knowledge of dosing limits, is associated with exceeding the
daily limit.”
For the study, 1,326 people who reported taking ibuprofen in the
previous month completed online medication diaries every day for one
week.
All of the participants took ibuprofen during the diary week, and 87
percent of them only used over-the-counter, or nonprescription,
versions, researchers report in Pharmacoepidemiology & Drug Safety.
Overall, 55 percent of participants took ibuprofen at least three
days during the week, and 16 percent took it every day.
In addition to ibuprofen, 37 percent of the participants reported
taking at least one other NSAID during the week, most often aspirin
or naproxen. Less than half of them recognized that all of the
products they were taking were NSAIDs.
One limitation of the study is that researchers only focused on
recent and current ibuprofen users, which may not reflect what doses
might be typical for sporadic or new users, the authors note.
Even so, the findings highlight a potential downside of making
NSAIDs widely available without a prescription, said Dr. Gunnar
Gislason, director of research for the Danish Heart Foundation in
Cophenhagen.
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“I believe that the message sent to the consumer when these drugs
are widely available in convenience stores and gas stations is that
these drugs are safe and you can use them safely for pain relief -
thus no need for reading the label,” Gislason, who wasn’t involved
in the study, said by email.
Even when people do read the label, they may still ignore it.
“If the recommended dosage does not give sufficient pain relief, it
is easier to take more pills than seeking professional advice from a
healthcare person or doctor,” Gislason added.
While doctors may prescribe NSAIDs for some muscle and joint
disorders and certain other health problems, these drugs aren’t
appropriate for many of the reasons that patients may buy them at
the drugstore, said Dr. Liffert Vogt of the Academic Medical Center
at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
“In my opinion NSAIDs should not be available as an over-the-counter
drug, because of all their deleterious effects,” Vogt, who wasn’t
involved in the study, said by email.
“For occasional use, acetaminophen (again in the right dose) is a
much safer option and very efficacious as a pain killer,” Vogt
added. “But we know that many people use NSAIDs for indications
other than pain, such as flu, allergies, fever - and there is no
medical base that indicates that NSAIDs or acetaminophen are of any
use under these circumstances.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2sgT6hr Pharmacoepidemiology & Drug Safety,
online January 26, 2018.
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