Dr. Sinatra's HeartMD Institute

Polypharmacy, the “Polypill” and Adverse Drug Reactions – What You Can Do to Protect Your Health

polypharmacy and the polypill - too many medications symbolized by a bowlful of pills

To say that I’ve been dealing with medication side effects for my entire career is no lie; within weeks of starting my cardiology practice, a hypertensive woman came to see me. She was reacting dramatically to a commonly prescribed diuretic and had developed a potassium deficiency that was causing muscle cramping and extreme weakness.

Even though I had prescribed drugs during my advanced medical training, I’d never seen a side effect that severe. It was an eye-opener, and the experience drove home the reality of adverse drug reactions. Textbooks and marketing ads generally describe medication side effects as “rare”—but they are real, and doctors too often tend to dismiss or downplay them when patients complain.

Too Many Meds

As my practice matured, I began to see more patients referred by internists and general practitioners in the area. Some of these folks were taking a half-dozen or more prescription drugs. Over time, a familiar pattern emerged. In addition to cardiovascular issues, these patients often had profound weakness and lethargy, disorientation, sleeplessness, nightmares, depression, heart failure symptoms (even when they didn’t have heart failure), constipation, and episodes of falling.

It became clear that drugs were exacerbating, rather than solving, their problems, and that these patients’ health was being damaged by the laundry lists of medications they were taking. Drugs for diabetes, hypertension, pain, depression, anxiety, cancer—you name it, they were on it.

I even had new patients who, as they were filling out medical history forms, asked for extra paper because six lines weren’t enough to write down all of their medications. One new patient was taking 18 drugs. It was medical madness!

The Rise of Polypharmacy and the “Polypill”

As you would expect, many of the patients I saw were elderly. With age, the body becomes less able to handle multiple medications and drugs are more likely to cause adverse reactions.

A 2015 report in the Journal of the American Medical Association calling out the dangers of “polypharmacy”—the prescription of five or more drugs to one person—gave me hope that this dangerous practice might change. But then I read an op ed piece in the Wall Street Journal advocating for a “polypill”—a single pill that contains medications for multiple conditions. For example, a statin may be combined with a blood sugar or blood pressure medication in a single tablet.

Heaven help us all.

Proponents of the polypill maintain that it will promote better patient compliance with taking medication and therefore improve outcomes. I see nothing but trouble. A polypill may make it more convenient for someone to take medications, but it doesn’t address the more fundamental issue—the fact that people are taking too many drugs in the first place. In fact, it just makes it easier to give them even more. That’s not smart medicine.

More Drugs, More Adverse Reactions

The biggest risk of polypharmacy is drug interactions. The more medications a patient takes, the higher the risk of unwanted or dangerous side effects. Here are some of the numbers:

A Better Path to Health

The solution to this problem is clear to me. To reduce both the number of medicines prescribed and the risk of adverse drug reactions, it’s time for all doctors to fully embrace an integrative approach to medicine. Prescription medicines are one tool that can help patients get well. But alternatives such as dietary interventions, targeted nutritional supplements, and stress-reducing techniques can be just as effective—without the life-crushing side effects.

If you‘re on multiple medications, I urge you to have a heart-to-heart with your doctor about safely cutting down. Be direct; ask straight away if you truly need all those drugs. It may feel uncomfortable, but you have to be your own advocate.

In the meantime, there are steps you can take on your own to protect against medication side effects, and even lay the groundwork for getting off some of those drugs:

Taking these steps not only will help you protect yourself from drug toxicity and adverse reactions, but  improve your health enough that you may not need so many medicines to begin with. Even a reduction is a win. If you can take three or four drugs instead of five—or even more—you’re better off.

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