May - 2006
Aboriginal women at risk of over-prescription
of drug
Raven's Eye Staff
When women seek help from physicians for feelings of anxiety,
depression or insomnia connected to their life experiences, the
result is often a prescription for benzodiazepines, a central
nervous system depressant shown to have significant side effects,
including memory and learning impairment, depression, emotional
blunting and paradoxical aggression. Benzodiazepines are also
highly addictive.
Researchers are increasingly documenting that older Aboriginal
women are being over-prescribed benzo-diazepines, which is putting
them at significant risk, reports the British Columbia Centre
of Excellence for Women's Health.
Benzodiazepines are often prescribed to women coping with difficult
life circumstances, such as illness, physical pain or adjustment
to a major life change. For Aboriginal women, these problems
are compounded by the legacy of colonization, higher rates of
poverty, violence, single parenting, widowhood and disability.
The correlation between trauma and abuse and diagnoses of post-traumatic
stress disorder (PSTD), the mental health problem most frequently
diagnosed among residential school survivors, can also place
Aboriginal seniors at risk for benzodiazepine use. PSTD is also
found among survivors of battering and sexual violence, which
Aboriginal women experience at three times the rate of non-Aboriginal
women and men.
Benzodiazepines are meant for short-term use, but studies have
shown that many continue using them for at least a year. A recent
study in the west of benzodiazepine use in First Nations residents
found that women accounted for almost two-thirds of benzodiazepine
prescriptions. The average number of prescriptions received by
clients was 7.7 per year, well beyond low-risk thresholds.
Researchers at the British Columbia Centre of Excellence for
Women's Health have recently completed two reports that provide
insight into the prescription of benzodiazepines to older First
Nations and Inuit women and men. The reports conclude that more
research is urgently needed.
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