MedPage Today (8/20, Bankhead) reports, “Cancer survivors had disproportionately higher rates of drug prescriptions for antidepressants and anxiolytics in a survey of more than 50,000 people.” Researchers found that “individuals who reported a personal history of cancer had a 32% higher rate of prescriptions for medications used to treat depression, increasing to almost 40% higher for anti-anxiety medications, compared with the general population.” MedPage Today adds, “In particular, patients on Medicare or Medicaid had more prescriptions for anxiolytics, and those with a history of certain poor-prognosis cancers more often reported prescriptions for antidepressants.” The findings were published in JAMA Network Open.
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