Pharmacy, School of Health and Biomedical Sciences, RMIT University, Bundoora, VIC, 3083, Australia.
Adelaide Medical School, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, 5005, Australia.
Int J Clin Pharm. 2024 Aug;46(4):811-830. doi: 10.1007/s11096-024-01727-9. Epub 2024 May 5.
Medication use in older adults is increasing, therefore, reducing the risk of suboptimal medicine use is imperative in achieving optimal therapeutic outcomes. Research suggests that factors such as personal beliefs and beliefs about medicines may be associated with non-adherence and inappropriate medicine use.
To systematically review and identify quantitative research on the influence of beliefs about medicines and the relationship with suboptimal medicine use in older adults.
Searches were conducted on PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO for quantitative studies (inception to March 2023).
(1) exposure: participants' beliefs (personal, cultural, and medication-related), (2) outcomes: polypharmacy, potentially inappropriate medicines use, or non-adherence, and (3) participants: community-dwelling adults 65 years or above. Study selection, data extraction and quality appraisal (Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal checklist) were completed independently by two investigators. Data were combined in a narrative synthesis and presented in a summary of findings table.
Nineteen articles were included: 15 cross-sectional and four cohort studies. Outcomes of included papers were as follows; adherence (n = 18) and potentially inappropriate medicine use (n = 1). Ten studies found stronger beliefs in the necessity of medicines and/or fewer concerns led to better adherence, with one paper contradicting these findings. Three studies did not find associations between adherence and beliefs. One study confirmed an association between unnecessary drug use and a lack of belief in a "powerful other" (e.g. doctor).
Further investigation is necessary to (1) ascertain the importance of necessity or concern beliefs in fostering adherence and, (2) examine the influence of beliefs on polypharmacy and inappropriate medicine use.
老年人用药量不断增加,因此,降低药物使用不当的风险对于实现最佳治疗效果至关重要。研究表明,个人信念和对药物的信念等因素可能与不遵医嘱和药物使用不当有关。
系统回顾和确定关于老年人对药物的信念及其与药物使用不当的关系的定量研究。
在 PubMed、EMBASE、CINAHL 和 PsycINFO 上进行了定量研究(从成立到 2023 年 3 月)的检索。
(1)暴露:参与者的信念(个人、文化和与药物相关的信念),(2)结果:多种药物治疗、潜在不适当药物使用或不遵医嘱,(3)参与者:65 岁或以上的社区居住成年人。两名研究人员独立完成了研究选择、数据提取和质量评估(Joanna Briggs Institute 批判性评估清单)。数据以叙述性综合形式合并,并在总结发现表中呈现。
共纳入 19 篇文章:15 篇横断面研究和 4 篇队列研究。纳入论文的结果如下;依从性(n=18)和潜在不适当药物使用(n=1)。10 项研究发现,对药物必要性的信念较强和/或对药物的担忧较少会导致更好的依从性,有一篇论文与这些发现相矛盾。三项研究未发现依从性与信念之间存在关联。一项研究证实,不必要的药物使用与缺乏对“强者”(如医生)的信念之间存在关联。
有必要进一步调查(1)确定必要性或担忧信念在促进依从性方面的重要性,以及(2)研究信念对多种药物治疗和不适当药物使用的影响。