Thorneloe Rachael J, Griffiths Christopher E M, Ashcroft Darren M, Cordingley Lis
Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PB, UK.
Centre for Dermatology Research, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Feb 7;17(1):119. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2020-y.
An estimated 50% of patients do not take their medication as prescribed, with medication adherence associated with adverse outcomes and higher costs of care. The Necessity-Concerns Framework identified individual's beliefs about their medication as playing a key role in adherence, and UK Clinical Adherence Guidelines recommend eliciting and incorporating individual's perceptions of their medication within the consultation. The Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) is widely used to assess medication beliefs, however, given the condition-specific nature of some self-management regimens, it is unknown whether this tool is able to fully capture beliefs about more complex medication regimens.
We examined the challenges of assessing medication beliefs using the BMQ in 20 people with a complex relapsing-remitting condition recruited from community sources. Data were collected from people with psoriasis; a patient group characterised by complex medication regimens, which include therapies that are applied topically, phototherapy/photochemotherapy, and therapies that are administered orally or via subcutaneous or intravenous injections. Semi-structured cognitive interviews were undertaken, with responses coded using established schedules and analysed using Content analysis.
Individual's beliefs about their condition specific therapies were not accurately captured by the BMQ. Medication beliefs as expressed during 'real-time' completion of the BMQ were underestimated, or failed to be captured, by the corresponding scores given by participants. There was mismatch between the terminology used in the scale and individuals perceptions of their condition and the complexity of its management and treatment outcomes. Currently the BMQ cannot represent beliefs about medicines underuse, even though some individuals with psoriasis viewed access to therapies as overly restrictive. Some the BMQ items were misinterpreted in part due to ambiguous item wording or due to misreading by participants.
This is the first study to identify general and condition-specific difficulties experienced by individuals completing the BMQ in 'real time'. The main implication of this research is the need to develop condition-specific versions of the BMQ in order that this important instrument can capture the full range of medication beliefs in individuals living with a complex relapsing-remitting condition. Access to condition-specific versions could significantly increase our understanding of beliefs which facilitate or reduce medication adherence.
据估计,50%的患者未按医嘱服药,药物依从性与不良后果及更高的护理成本相关。必要性-担忧框架指出,个体对其药物的信念在依从性方面起着关键作用,英国临床依从性指南建议在会诊中引出并纳入个体对其药物的看法。药物信念问卷(BMQ)被广泛用于评估药物信念,然而,鉴于某些自我管理方案具有特定疾病的性质,尚不清楚该工具是否能够充分捕捉对更复杂药物治疗方案的信念。
我们对从社区招募的20名患有复杂复发缓解型疾病的患者使用BMQ评估药物信念的挑战进行了研究。数据收集自银屑病患者;该患者群体的药物治疗方案复杂,包括局部应用疗法、光疗/光化学疗法以及口服、皮下或静脉注射疗法。进行了半结构化认知访谈,使用既定的时间表对回答进行编码,并采用内容分析法进行分析。
BMQ未能准确捕捉个体对其特定疾病疗法的信念。在“实时”完成BMQ期间所表达的药物信念被参与者给出的相应分数低估或未能捕捉到。量表中使用的术语与个体对其病情的看法以及病情管理和治疗结果的复杂性之间存在不匹配。目前,BMQ无法代表对药物使用不足的信念,尽管一些银屑病患者认为获得治疗的途径限制过多。部分BMQ项目被误解,部分原因是项目措辞含糊或参与者误读。
这是第一项确定个体在“实时”完成BMQ时遇到的一般和特定疾病困难的研究。这项研究的主要意义在于需要开发特定疾病版本的BMQ,以便这一重要工具能够捕捉患有复杂复发缓解型疾病个体的全部药物信念。获得特定疾病版本可以显著增加我们对促进或降低药物依从性的信念的理解。