scholarly journals Replicating and Extending the Four-Factor Structure of the Medication Adherence Reasons Scale (MAR-SCALE) in Pain, Migraine, And Sleep Conditions Among People Using Daily and Weekly Administered Oral Medications

2018 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. S112-S113
Author(s):  
A Goren ◽  
E Unni
2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Toll ◽  
Vanessa Leary ◽  
Sherry A. McKee ◽  
Daniel J. Martin ◽  
Peter Jatlow ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 219-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly D. Coyne ◽  
Katherine A. Trimble ◽  
Ashley Lloyd ◽  
Laura Petrando ◽  
Jennie Pentz ◽  
...  

Pediatric oncology protocols frequently include multiple oral medications administered at varied dosing schedules, often for prolonged periods of time. Nonadherence to protocol-directed oral medications may place patients at increased risk for morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this systematic review was to evaluate the existing body of evidence to determine best-practice recommendations regarding interventions for oral medication adherence in children and adolescents with cancer. Twenty-four articles were systematically reviewed and evaluated according to the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation criteria; 2 studies focused on the pediatric oncology population, and the remaining 22 studies focused on other chronic illnesses of childhood. A variety of interventions to increase oral medication adherence in children were identified, including pill swallowing, technology, incentivization, education-based intervention, psychosocial support-based intervention, and combination intervention. Most interventions were shown to have some benefit in pediatrics, most in the non-oncology setting. The overall synthesis of the literature indicates that nonadherence to oral medications is a prevalent problem in pediatrics, and much work is needed to address this problem, particularly in pediatric oncology.


2007 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 597-605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Toll ◽  
Sherry A. McKee ◽  
Daniel J. Martin ◽  
Peter Jatlow ◽  
Stephanie S. O'Malley

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olayinka Shiyanbola ◽  
Deepika Rao ◽  
Sierra Kuehl ◽  
Daniel Bolt ◽  
Earlise Ward ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Diabetes is burdensome to African Americans, who are twice as likely to be diagnosed, more likely to develop complications and are at a greater risk for death and disability than non-Hispanic whites. Medication adherence interventions are sometimes ineffective for African Americans because their unique illness perceptions are not adequately addressed. The Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised (IPQ-R) that assesses illness perceptions has shown reliability and validity problems when used with African Americans. Thus, the study objective was to adapt the IPQ-R for African Americans and assess the validity and reliability of the culturally adapted questionnaire.Methods: Using an exploratory sequential mixed methods design, we explored African Americans’ illness perceptions qualitatively, used the results to adapt the IPQ-R, and tested the culturally adapted IPQ-R items quantitatively. The culturally adapted IPQ-R was administered to 170 African Americans with type 2 diabetes in a face-to-face survey. Content, construct, convergent, and predictive validity, including reliability was examined. Pearson and item-total correlations, item analysis, exploratory factor analysis, multiple linear regression analysis, and test-retest were conducted. Results: A new 9-factor structure for the culturally-adapted IPQ-R was identified. The new factor structure was distinct from the old factor structure of the IPQ-R. The ‘consequences’ domain from the IPQ-R occurred as two factors (external and internal consequences) while the ‘emotional representations’ domain in the IPQ-R emerged as separate ‘present’ and ‘future’ emotional representation factors. Illness coherence’ was differently conceptualized as ‘illness interpretations’ to capture additional culturally-adapted items within this domain. Most items had factor loadings greater than 0.4, with moderate factor score correlations. Necessity and concern beliefs in medicines significantly correlated with domains of the culturally-adapted IPQ-R. Pearson’s correlation values were not greater than 0.7, indicating good convergent validity. The culturally-adapted IPQ-R significantly predicted medication adherence. None of the correlation values were higher than 0.7 for the test-retest, indicating moderate reliability. Most domains of the culturally-adapted IPQ-R had Cronbach’s alpha values higher than 0.7, indicating good internal consistency. Conclusions: The results provide preliminary support for the validity of the culturally-adapted IPQ-R in African Americans with diabetes, showing good construct, convergent and predictive validity, as well as reliability.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (31_suppl) ◽  
pp. 106-106
Author(s):  
Ashley Leak Bryant ◽  
Ya-Ning Chan ◽  
Jaime Richardson ◽  
Matthew Charles Foster ◽  
Debra Wujcik

106 Background: AML is a disease of older adults (median age 67 years). Although standard AML treatment is intravenous (IV) chemotherapy, availability of oral anti-cancer medications has increased , providing benefits and risks to patients. Patients prefer their convenience, absence of IV infusions, potential for fewer clinic visits, and increased subjective feeling of control over their disease. Poor adherence can increase toxicity risk and compromise treatment effectiveness. We aim to identify barriers to adherence to oral medications in patients with AML and proposed solutions for improvements. Methods: Following IRB approval, patients with AML and their caregivers were recruited to participate in focus groups. An experienced moderator conducted the groups using an interview guide developed by AML experts. Participants received gift cards for their participation. Sessions were digitally recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed for thematic content using Dedoose qualitative software. Results: 11 patients (5 <65 years; 6 >65 years) and 4 caregivers participated in sessions lasting 60-75 minutes. Three central themes emerged: medication adherence challenges, managing an oral adherence plan, and strategies to improve oral adherence. Adherence challenges: number and size of pills, different directions, cost, availability, and side effects. An adherence plan was recommended: written schedules, take medications around meals, and use of pillboxes and alarms. Main sources of information: health care team and bottle directions. Recommendations for providing adherence assistance included better instructions, assistance with scheduling, making pills smaller, and consistency in packaging. Conclusions: Patients are an important source of insight into barriers and solutions to oral medication adherence. These responses were used to develop a survey to be administered to 100 patients with AML. Results will inform development of an intervention to improve oral medication adherence in the AML population.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvy Cherian ◽  
Brian Sang Lee ◽  
Robin M. Tucker ◽  
Kevin Lee ◽  
Gregory Smutzer

Bitter taste is aversive to humans, and many oral medications exhibit a bitter taste. Bitter taste can be suppressed by the use of inhibitors or by masking agents such as sucralose. Another approach is to encapsulate bitter tasting compounds in order to delay their release. This delayed release can permit the prior release of bitter masking agents. Suppression of bitter taste was accomplished by encapsulating a bitter taste stimulus in erodible stearic acid microspheres, and embedding these 5 µmeter diameter microspheres in pullulan films that contain sucralose and peppermint oil as masking agents, along with an encapsulated masking agent (sucralose). Psychophysical tests demonstrated that films which encapsulated both quinine and sucralose produced a significant and continuous sweet percept when compared to films without sucralose microspheres. Films with both quinine and sucralose microspheres also produced positive hedonic scores that did not differ from control films that contained only sucralose microspheres or only empty (blank) microspheres. The encapsulation of bitter taste stimuli in lipid microspheres, and embedding these microspheres in rapidly dissolving edible taste films that contain masking agents in both the film base and in microspheres, is a promising approach for diminishing the bitter taste of drugs and related compounds.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 86-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yelena P. Wu ◽  
David D. Stenehjem ◽  
Lauri A. Linder ◽  
Bin Yu ◽  
Bridget Grahmann Parsons ◽  
...  

Adherence to oral medications during maintenance therapy is essential for pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Self-reported or electronic monitoring of adherence indicate suboptimal adherence, particularly among particular sociodemographic groups. This study used medication refill records to examine adherence among a national sample of pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Patients in a national claims database, aged 0 to 21 years with a diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and in the maintenance phase of treatment, were included. Medication possession ratios were used as measures of adherence. Overall adherence and adherence by sociodemographic groups were examined. Adherence rates were 85% for 6-mercaptopurine and 81% for methotrexate. Adherence was poorer among patients 12 years and older. Oral medication adherence rates were suboptimal and similar to or lower than previously documented rates using other methods of assessing adherence. Refill records offer a promising avenue for monitoring adherence. Additional work to identify groups most at-risk for poor adherence is needed. Nurses are well positioned to routinely monitor for medication adherence and to collaborate with the multidisciplinary team to address barriers to adherence.


BMJ Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. e055930
Author(s):  
Constance P Fontanet ◽  
Niteesh K Choudhry ◽  
Wendy Wood ◽  
Ted Robertson ◽  
Nancy Haff ◽  
...  

IntroductionMedication adherence for patients with chronic conditions such as gout, a debilitating form of arthritis that requires daily medication to prevent flares, is a costly problem. Existing interventions to improve medication adherence have only been moderately effective. Habit formation theory is a promising strategy to improve adherence. The cue-reward-repetition principle posits that habits are formed by repeatedly completing an activity after the same cue and having the action rewarded every time. Over time, cues become increasingly important whereas rewards become less salient because the action becomes automatic. Leveraging the cue-reward-repetition principle could improve adherence to daily gout medications.Methods and analysisThis three-arm parallel randomised controlled trial tests an adaptive intervention that leverages the repetition cue-reward principle. The trial will began recruitment in August 2021 in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Eligible patients are adults with gout who have been prescribed a daily oral medication for gout and whose most recent uric acid is above 6 mg/dL. Participants will be randomised to one of three arms and given electronic pill bottles. In the two intervention arms, participants will select a daily activity to link to their medication-taking (cue) and a charity to which money will be donated every time they take their medication (reward). Participants in Arm 1 will receive reminder texts about their cue and their charity reward amount will be US$0.50 per day of medication taken. Arm 2 will be adaptive; participants will receive a US$0.25 per adherent-day and no reminder texts. If their adherence is <75% 6 weeks postrandomisation, their reward will increase to US$0.50 per adherent-day and they will receive reminder texts. The primary outcome is adherence to gout medications over 18 weeks.Ethics and disseminationThis trial has ethical approval in the USA. Results will be published in a publicly accessible peer-reviewed journal.Trial registration numberNCT04776161


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 4701-4701
Author(s):  
Lori E Crosby ◽  
Katherine M Kidwell ◽  
Aimee K Hildenbrand ◽  
Charles T. Quinn ◽  
Meghan E Mcgrady

Background: The field has made significant strides in understanding the mechanisms underlying pediatric sickle cell disease (SCD), and the coming years will likely see the approval of several new medications to treat SCD. The impact of these medications on clinical outcomes, however, will be dependent on patient adherence. Adolescents with SCD are at particular risk for non-adherence, and as disease management increasingly includes self-administration of oral medications, adherence assessment will become a critical component of research on medication effectiveness and clinical care. While electronic monitoring devices (bottles with computer chips that record date- and time-stamps of device openings) such as MEMS® bottles are considered the "gold standard" for adherence assessment in other populations, their feasibility among adolescents with SCD remains unknown. Objectives: The primary aims of this study were to examine data on MEMS® bottle use among adolescents (ages 13-21 years) with SCD to: 1) evaluate the feasibility of MEMS® bottle use; and 2) elicit barriers and facilitators to MEMS® bottle use. Methods: As part of a larger study of a self-management intervention, adolescents were asked to use a MEMS® bottle to store and administer their daily oral medication (hydroxyurea or deferasirox) for the 18-week study duration. The larger study included baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up assessments, at which adolescents were asked to provide their MEMS® bottle for data download. Descriptive statistics were calculated to assess multiple domains of MEMS® bottle feasibility including: initial uptake (% enrolled), MEMS® initiation (% initiated), and MEMS® sustained use (% completed; % provided bottles for download ±2 weeks of scheduled study visit = "on time"). Barriers and facilitators to MEMS® use were elicited via adolescent self-report. Results: In the larger study, 18 non-Hispanic African-American adolescents (M = 17.8 years, SD = 2.6; 61% male) with HbSS were asked to use a MEMS® bottle to store their hydroxyurea (n = 14) or deferasirox (n = 4). Initial uptake was 94.7%, with 18 of 19 eligible adolescents enrolling in the study. Of the 18 enrolled adolescents, all initiated MEMS® use (100%) and 11 sustained MEMS® use through the final study endpoint (61.1%). Eight (44.4%) and 2 (11.1%) adolescents provided their MEMS® bottle for download "on time" at post-treatment (42 days) and follow-up (126 days), respectively. Barriers to MEMS® use included medication changes (i.e., medication holds, dose timing changes) and transitioning from pediatric to adult care. Facilitators included tip sheets (e.g., places to store bottle, reminder to place refills in bottle) and reminder calls. Participants took a median of 26.2% of doses using the MEMS® across the 126 days (SD = 22.4; range 0.79% - 79.3%), illustrating that electronic monitoring devices are not a solution to medication adherence, but are one component of an adherence support strategy. See Figure 1 for adherence rates over time. Discussion: Data suggest that MEMS® are acceptable to adolescents with SCD. Ensuring sustained MEMS® use, however, will likely require additional supports. For example, electronic monitors which automatically transmit data in real-time via Bluetooth or cellular connections would eliminate the need for adolescents to bring bottles to study visits for data downloads. Researchers and clinicians interested in using electronic monitoring devices are encouraged to consider remote monitoring capabilities along with other device features when selecting a product. Larger studies are needed to evaluate concordance between rates of adherence obtained via electronic monitoring and other assessments and to validate electronically-monitored medication adherence with clinically-relevant outcomes for adolescents with SCD. Figure 1 Disclosures Quinn: Celgene: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Amgen: Other: Research Support.


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