More Trips to the Pharmacy: Americans Increasing Prescription Drug Use

New research shows that more Americans are taking prescription drugs, a trend that raises fresh concerns about over-medication.

The report, released by the National Center for Health Statistics, compared prescription drug use in 1999-2000 versus 2007-2008. It found that, over the  period, the percentage of Americans who took at least one prescription drug in the month prior to being surveyed climbed from 43.5 percent to 48.3 percent.

Perhaps the most striking finding was that, in the 2007-2008 survey, 36.7 percent of Americans 60 and older reported taking five or more medicines. The most frequent type of drug for older Americans is cholesterol medication, whose use climbed to 44.9 percent of the 60-and-up age group.

“People may be taking too many drugs — that’s a big concern in the older age groups,” said Dr. Qiuping Gu, the epidemiologist who led the research told The New York Times. “When you see such a big percentage taking five or more drugs, side effects and safety become very serious issues.”

Overall prescription use held relatively steady, however, among children and adolescents. Among children under 12 years old, 22.4 percent took at least one prescription medicine, with asthma drugs the most common.

Among adolescents ages 12 to 19, the figure was 29.9 percent. But within the adolescent group, there was a significant change: 6.1 percent were on medication for attention deficit problems, up from 3 percent in the earlier survey.

The study found whites take prescription drugs more often than other groups. But the factor that correlated most often with prescription drug use was whether someone had health insurance. Those with health coverage were more than twice as likely as the uninsured to use prescription drugs.

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