Study (Year of Publication) |
Location |
Design |
Sample Size, No. |
Response Rate, % |
Type of Shared Medicines |
Reported Reasons/Sources |
Recommended Interventions |
Hogan et al. (1990)17 |
University hospital, Saskatoon Saskatchewan, Canada |
Cross-sectional survey with one-on-one interviews of randomly selected dermatology outpatients with diverse sociodemographics |
114 |
NR |
Topical corticosteroids, topical antifungals and antibiotics, oral antibiotics, topical antiacne medications, crotamiton cream, codeine with acetylsalicylic acid |
Got from family members or friends |
Asking patients with cutaneous disorders about previous use of medications from all sources while delivering care |
Anglin and White (1999)18 |
Community health clinic and other settings in rural eastern Kentucky |
Ethnographic research: interviews with health and social workers and nonprofessional staff and observation of clinic |
16 |
NA |
Not specified |
Ran out of medications, obtained from another person or health care provider, lacked money to pay for prescribed medications, to make prescriptions last longer, self-medication, got medicines through social networks |
Close monitoring of medication use by health care providers, educating patients through pharmacy and nurses, reducing poverty and improving medication access, tightening communication between physicians and pharmacists to reduce overprescribing and leftover medicines |
Thompson and Stewart (2001)19 |
Metropolitan areas of Melbourne, Australia |
In-home interviews with noninstitutionalized persons aged ≥ 65 y |
204 |
87 |
Central nervous system and musculoskeletal agents; genitourinary agents; alimentary, cardiovascular, respiratory agents; NSAIDs |
Ran out of medications, person asked to share medication, forgot own medication, to try the medication |
Promoting pharmacy collection of unwanted medicines from customers |
Daniel et al. (2003)1 |
United States |
Analysis of data from Youthstyles (mail survey of respondents aged 9–18 y) |
1568 |
52 |
NR |
Got from family members, leftover medicines; had prescription for same medicine; had the same medical problem as the person who had the medicine; wanted something strong for pimples or oily skin; ran out of medications; emergency; cost; needed for pain, headache, or sleep; wanted to relax or feel good; influenced by advertising |
Educating girls and their parents about the need to take medication safely, targeting educational messages to adolescents on safe use of medications |
Sorensen et al. (2003)20 |
Australia, 4 states |
Cross-sectional survey (researcher-administered questionnaires) of community-dwelling, older war veterans and widowers at risk for medication misadventures and living in their own homes |
1086 |
NR |
NSAIDs, COX-2 inhibitors, benzodiazepines, cardiovascular medications, H-2 antagonists and proton pump inhibitors, codeine or dextropropoxyphene combinations, paroxetine, thyroxin sodium, warfarin, α-2 receptor agonists (inhalers), latanoprost, quinine, allopurinol, bethamethasone (ointment), diphenoxylate with atropine sulfate, prochlorperazine |
Shared with spouse |
NR |
Hamrosi et al. (2006)21 |
Community health centers and hospitals in midwestern New South Wales, Australia |
Qualitative in-depth interviews with Aboriginal health workers |
11 |
NA |
Not specified |
Shared between family and friends |
Providing education that considers community culture and giving appropriate and adequate education training for Aboriginal health workers |
Goldsworthy et al. (2008)22 |
United States, 20 cities |
Cross-sectional survey (one-to-one interviews), of respondents aged 12–44 y, with diverse sociodemographic characteristics |
700 |
NR |
Allergy medications (e.g., Allegra, Claritin), pain medications (e.g., Darvoset, OxyContin), antibiotics (e.g., amoxicillin, doxycyclin, Bactrim/Septra), mood medications (e.g., Paxil, Zoloft, Valium, Ritalin), acne medication (e.g., Accutane), birth control pills |
Got from family members; had leftover medicines; had prescription for same medicine; had the same medical problem as the person who had the medicine; wanted something strong for pimples or oily skin; ran out of medications; emergency; cost; needed for pain, headache, or sleep; wanted to relax or feel good; influenced by advertising; got from someone who knew about medications; helped a friend |
NR |
Petersen et al. (2008)23 |
United States |
Analysis of data from 2001– 2006 US Healthstyles survey (cross-sectional mail survey of individuals), with emphasis on women of reproductive age (n = 7400) |
26 289 |
72.2 |
Allergy medications, pain medications, antibiotics, mood medications, birth control pills, acne medications |
Got from family member; already had prescription but ran out; had the same medical problem as the person who had the medicine; needed for pain, headache or sleep; emergency; had leftover medicines; cost; wanted to relax or feel good; wanted something strong for pimples or oily skin; influenced by advertising |
Discussing the risk of sharing with the patient during prescribing, designing programs to promote safe disposal of unwanted medicines, ensuring access to health care and medications for women of reproductive age |
Goldsworthy and Mayhorn (2009)24 |
United States, public spaces of 11 urban and suburban areas |
Cross-sectional survey (one-on-one interviews) of demographically diverse adolescents aged 12–17 y |
594 |
NR |
Allergy medications, pain medications, mood medications, antibiotics, acne medications, birth control pills |
To avoid health care provider visit |
Providing training to health care providers on the risk of borrowed medications and educating patients on the proper use of medications and risks of sharing; developing messages on sharing, e.g., within product label; public awareness campaigns |
Mayhorn and Goldsworthy (2009)25 |
United States, 11 locations across country |
Cross-sectional survey (one-on-one interviews) of demographically diverse individuals |
2773 |
NR |
Allergy medications (e.g., Zyrtec, Clarinex, Flonase), pain medications (e.g., Darvoset, OxyContin), antibiotics (e.g., amoxicillin, doxycyclin, Bactrim/Septra), mood medications (e.g., Paxil, Zoloft, valium, Ritalin), acne medication (e.g., Accutane), birth control pills |
NR |
Increasing public awareness on medication sharing dangers, adding sharing prohibition messages to labeling, providing training to health care providers |
Ali et al. (2010)26 |
Universiti Sains Malaysia |
Cross-sectional survey (one-on-one interviews) of randomly sampled female students |
481 |
90.7 |
Not specified |
Got from family or friends, leftover medicines |
NR |
Goulding et al. (2011)27 |
University College Cork, Ireland |
Cross-sectional survey (anonymous electronic questionnaire) of students, aged 18–25 y |
343 |
NR |
Contraceptives, antibiotics, analgesics |
Got from family or friend, cost, inconvenience of visiting doctors, didn't feel sick enough to see doctor |
Educating about adverse drug events of medications, discouraging patients from sharing; advising patients to safely dispose of medications |
Auta et al. (2011)28 |
University of Jos, Nigeria |
Cross-sectional survey (self-administered questionnaire) of randomly sampled students |
730 |
81.6 |
Cold/flu medications, pain medications, antibiotics, dermatological medications, mood medications, antimalarials |
Emergency, had the same medical problem as the person who had the medicine, influenced by advertising, ran out of medicines, got from someone who knew about medicines or from family members, leftover medicines |
Educating public on danger of medication sharing |
Goebel et al. (2011)29 |
California, 2 hospitals and 6 affiliated community sites |
Cross-sectional cohort study (one-on-one interviews), analysis of self-reported substance misuse for pain management among veterans |
343 |
NR |
NR |
For pain management |
NR |
Ward et al. (2011)30 |
New York, 4 clinical sites at an urban academic medical center |
Cross-sectional survey (one-on-one interviews) of randomly sampled individuals aged ≥ 18 y |
641 |
80 |
Opioids (Schedule II–IV), NSAIDs and COX-2 inhibitors, benzodiazepines, antibiotics, antihypertensives, others |
Got from family members, friends, someone from street, or Internet; to get high, convenience, self-medication, cost |
Regularly asking patients about medication use, cautioning patients about borrowing medications even if they deny the behavior |
Ellis et al. (2011)31 |
Illawarra region, New South Wales, Australia |
Mixed methods (focus group discussion followed by self-administered survey); convenience sample of independently living adults aged ≥ 65 y |
focus group, n = 28; survey, n = 226 |
65 |
Antihypertensive, heart disease medications, arthritis or joint inflammation medications, strong pain medications, diabetic medications, depression/anxiety medications, antibiotics, others |
Got from family members, ran out of medicines, forgot to fill prescriptions, severe pain, cost, could not go to chemist or doctor, self-medication, tried medication before visiting doctor, medication similar to previous prescription |
NR |
Kheir et al. (2011)32 |
Qatar |
Cross-sectional telephone interview with randomly sampled household representatives |
49 |
18 |
Antidiabetic medications, anti-infective medications, inhaled bronchodilators, inhaled corticosteroids, oral corticosteroids |
Shared with family members |
NR |
Hodgetts et al. (2011)33 |
Central North Island, New Zealand |
Focus group discussion with community health workers with heritage linkage with Māori people and employed by Māori tribal health provider |
7 |
NA |
Most prescription medications |
Shared among family members and social networks, avoided visits to general practitioner/pharmacy, ran out of medications, obtained prescription medicines from general practitioner by presenting false proxy symptoms, cost, cultural barrier |
Integrating medication-sharing concerns into training of health care providers |
Kamutingondo et al. (2011)34 |
Hamilton, New Zealand |
Ethnographic research (interviews, photographs, diaries, mapping, material objects, and media content) among 4 Zimbabwean households |
17 |
NA |
NR |
To demonstrate care among family members during illness, to sustain and nurture social relationship among households |
NR |