Drug poisoning and associated factors in western Saudi Arabia: A five-year retrospective chart review (2011-2016)

Drug poisoning is a globally common cause of emergency-room admissions. This study explores drug-poisoning prevalence patterns, associated risk factors (gender, age and exposure circumstances), and outcomes in western Saudi Arabia. Retrospective analysis of Clinical drug poisoning cases (2011-2016)....

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Published inPakistan journal of medical sciences Vol. 33; no. 5; pp. 1188 - 1193
Main Authors Alzahrani, Sami H, Alqahtani, Ali H, Farahat, Fayssal Mostafa, Elnour, Mohammed Abdel Galil, Bashawri, Jamil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Pakistan Knowledge Bylanes 31.10.2017
AsiaNet Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd
Professional Medical Publications
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Summary:Drug poisoning is a globally common cause of emergency-room admissions. This study explores drug-poisoning prevalence patterns, associated risk factors (gender, age and exposure circumstances), and outcomes in western Saudi Arabia. Retrospective analysis of Clinical drug poisoning cases (2011-2016). The data were retrieved from the Saudi Ministry of Health's record and Patients' medical charts were analyzed. The Ministry of Health received 1,474 reports of drug poisoning during 2011-2016. More than half involved females (n=885, 60%) or young children (0-4 years old) (n=764, 51.8%) and occurred accidentally (n=786, 53.3%); almost all had an oral route of poisoning (n=1,466, 99.5%). The cases most frequently involved analgesic and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (n=373, 25.2%); antiepileptic, antipsychotic, psychoactive, and anxiolytic drugs (n=229, 16.3%); antihistamine, asthma, flu, and cough drugs (n=157, 12.0%); and antibiotic, anti-fungal; and antiprotozoal drugs (n=74, 5.0%). Antidotes were administered in only 2.2% of cases, and no deaths were reported. The drug poisoning cases involved females and young children (younger than 5 years old) and the most cases were accidental, and the most commonly used drugs were analgesics (Panadol), followed by antipsychotics, antihistamines, and antiepileptics (Tegretol).
ISSN:1682-024X
1681-715X
DOI:10.12669/pjms.335.13119