Waheedi Mohammad, Jeragh-Alhaddad Fatima B, Awad Abdelmoneim Ismail, Enlund Hannes
Faculty of Pharmacy, Kuwait University, Kuwait.
Finnish Medicines Agency, Kuopio, Finland.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2017 Aug 17;11:1413-1421. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S138468. eCollection 2017.
Nonadherence to diabetes medication is a significant barrier toward achieving positive treatment outcomes. There is an abundance of research looking at the problem from the patient perspective, but less from the provider perspective. The Middle East region has one of the highest prevalences of type 2 diabetes in the world, with special cultural characteristics, which require research attention. The aim of this study was to explore the views of primary-care physicians on medication nonadherence among type 2 diabetes patients.
A descriptive qualitative study was performed using one-on-one semistructured interviews of 21 primary-care physicians who were selected using stratified and random sampling from polyclinics in the five health districts in Kuwait. The interviews elicited the participants' views about barriers and facilitators of medication adherence in type 2 diabetes patients. The interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Thematic content analysis with constant comparison was used to generate the codes and themes to arrive at a core category.
Patient understanding, including knowledge, beliefs, and attitudes, was identified by respondents as the core determinant of medication nonadherence in type 2 diabetes. This was composed of six major themes: four against understanding and two for understanding. The ones against were "Patients do not understand diabetes", "Patients do not understand the importance of medications", "What the patient hears from friends is more important than what the doctor says", "Patients are in denial (or difficult)". Themes for understanding were "I need to educate more" and "Patients must hear it from other sources".
That lack of understanding among patients results in medication nonadherence is the dominant view of primary-care physicians. This finding has implications in relation to the evolution of diabetes care toward more patient-centeredness within the cultural context.
不坚持服用糖尿病药物是实现积极治疗效果的重大障碍。有大量研究从患者角度审视这一问题,但从医疗服务提供者角度进行的研究较少。中东地区是世界上2型糖尿病患病率最高的地区之一,具有特殊的文化特征,需要开展研究予以关注。本研究的目的是探讨基层医疗医生对2型糖尿病患者药物治疗不依从性的看法。
采用描述性定性研究方法,对从科威特五个健康区的多诊所中通过分层随机抽样选取的21名基层医疗医生进行一对一的半结构化访谈。访谈引出了参与者对2型糖尿病患者药物治疗依从性的障碍和促进因素的看法。访谈进行了录音并逐字转录。采用持续比较的主题内容分析法生成代码和主题,以得出核心类别。
受访者将患者的理解,包括知识、信念和态度,确定为2型糖尿病患者药物治疗不依从性的核心决定因素。这由六个主要主题组成:四个不利于理解的主题和两个有利于理解的主题。不利于理解的主题是“患者不了解糖尿病”“患者不了解药物的重要性”“患者从朋友那里听到的比医生说的更重要”“患者否认(或难以接受)”。有利于理解的主题是“我需要加强教育”和“患者必须从其他渠道了解”。
患者缺乏理解导致药物治疗不依从,这是基层医疗医生的主流观点。这一发现对于在文化背景下将糖尿病护理向更加以患者为中心的方向发展具有启示意义。