Alberta College of Pharmacy, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Faculty of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, 3-171 Edmonton Clinic Health Academy, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
Int J Pharm Pract. 2020 Aug;28(4):362-369. doi: 10.1111/ijpp.12608. Epub 2020 Feb 26.
The primary objective was to determine medication-taking behaviours and factors influencing adherence in patients with mental illness and recent homelessness. Secondary objectives were to explore patients' perceptions on mobile technology use to support adherence.
A constructivist approach and qualitative description method was used. The sample population consisted of patients with recent homelessness and mental illness affiliated with a community-based outreach programme in Canada. Participants were purposefully selected; semi-structured interviews were conducted to elicit information on medication-taking strategies and mobile technology to support adherence. A standardized questionnaire collected demographic and medical information; the Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) was used to evaluate self-reported adherence. Questionnaire data were analysed using summary descriptive statistics. Interview data were subject to qualitative content analysis.
Fifteen participants with a mean age of 44 years were included. The mean MARS score ± standard deviation was 7.3 ± 1.5. Themes arising from the data included patient factors (i.e. insight, attitudes towards medications, coping strategies) and external factors (i.e. therapeutic alliance, family support that impacted adherence) and technology use and health. Eight participants (53%) had access to a mobile phone. There was a moderate interest in the use of mobile technology to support adherence, with cost and technology literacy identified as barriers.
External supports and individual medication management strategies were important in supporting medication adherence in this patient group. Perceived need for mobile technology, in addition to existing supports for adherence, was not high. Challenges accessing and maintaining consistent mobile technology and individual preferences should be considered when developing mobile technology-based interventions.
主要目的是确定有精神疾病和近期无家可归史的患者的用药行为以及影响其用药依从性的因素。次要目的是探索患者对支持用药依从性的移动技术应用的看法。
采用建构主义方法和定性描述方法。样本人群为加拿大一个基于社区的外展计划中与近期无家可归和精神疾病有关的患者。参与者是有目的选择的;进行半结构化访谈以获取有关用药策略和支持用药依从性的移动技术的信息。一份标准化问卷收集人口统计学和医学信息;采用用药依从性评定量表(MARS)评估自我报告的依从性。问卷数据采用总结性描述性统计进行分析。访谈数据进行定性内容分析。
纳入了 15 名平均年龄为 44 岁的参与者。MARS 评分的平均值±标准差为 7.3±1.5。从数据中得出的主题包括患者因素(即洞察力、对药物的态度、应对策略)和外部因素(即治疗联盟、影响依从性的家庭支持)以及技术应用和健康。8 名参与者(53%)拥有移动电话。对使用移动技术支持依从性的兴趣中等,存在成本和技术素养方面的障碍。
外部支持和个人药物管理策略对于支持该患者群体的药物依从性很重要。对移动技术的需求,除了现有的依从性支持,并不高。在开发基于移动技术的干预措施时,应考虑获取和维持一致的移动技术以及个人偏好方面的挑战。