Trends in high-risk medication use across four countries: Hong Kong, New Zealand, United Kingdom and Australia

This interdisciplinary project across Pharmacy, Psychiatry, Pharmacoepidemiology, and Primary Care and Public Health, aims to characterise the patterns and temporal trends in the global prescribing of three high-risk medications – antidepressants, opioids, and lithium – by estimating the prevalence and incidence of use in children, adults, and older adults (>65 years). These high-risk medications have a high chance of causing harm or death if misused, yet use has significantly grown over the last decade. Utilisation patterns for these medicines vary widely, yet what these patterns are, and how these vary between countries/regions, have not been well studied.

To achieve the project aim, each of the four U21 members adopted a common protocol to access local patient-level electronic data on antidepressants, opioids, and lithium use from 1st January 2009 to 31st December 2018.

Brad Raos NF
Amy-Chan

Principal Investigator:  Dr Amy Chan

PI Contact email:  a.chan@auckland.ac.nz

Collaborators: Dr Kebede Beyene (University of Auckland), Prof David Coghill (University of Melbourne), Professor Stephen Weng (Nottingham University), Professor Ian Wong (Hong Kong University)

Status: Completed

Funding: Universitas 21