Crum Katherine L, Choudhry Niteesh K, Fontanet Constance, Sears Ellen S, Hanken Kaitlin, Lauffenburger Julie C, Mastrorilli Julianna, Oduol Theresa, Vine Seanna, Bhatkhande Gauri, Oran Rebecca, Robertson Ted, Wood Wendy, Feldman Candace H
Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
ACR Open Rheumatol. 2024 Oct;6(10):625-633. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11706. Epub 2024 Jul 15.
This study investigates patients' medication-taking routines and the feasibility of harnessing habit formation through context cues and rewards to improve medication adherence.
Semistructured qualitative interviews with patients with gout from an urban health care system were conducted to explore typical medication-taking behavior, experiences using electronic pill bottles, barriers to adherence, existing context cues, and potential cues and rewards for habit-forming behavior. Medication-taking patterns were recorded for six weeks using electronic pill bottles before interviews to inform discussion. Transcribed interviews were analyzed to generate themes using codes developed by the study team, with representative quotations selected as illustrations.
We conducted interviews with 15 individuals (mean age 60.6 [SD 20.3] years, three women [20%], and nine White patients [60%]). Pill bottle-recorded adherence to urate-lowering therapy (ULT) was high (mean 0.91 [SD 0.10]), and one patient was experiencing an active gout flare. Five key themes emerged: (1) reasons for nonadherence, (2) internal and external motivations for adherence, (3) structured routines around taking medications, (4) rewards for good medication adherence, and (5) the role of pill cap technology in medication-taking.
The importance of a predictable, structured routine in which participants could incorporate their medication-taking behavior emerged as a key factor that promoted consistent adherence. Further, identifying context cues and reminders seemed to promote incorporation of medication-taking into routines. Therefore, habit-based interventions that use context cues to establish routines around medication-taking may be a feasible strategy to improve adherence in patients with chronic conditions such as gout.
本研究调查患者的服药习惯,以及通过情境线索和奖励来利用习惯形成以提高药物依从性的可行性。
对城市医疗系统中的痛风患者进行半结构化定性访谈,以探讨典型的服药行为、使用电子药瓶的体验、依从性障碍、现有的情境线索以及习惯养成行为的潜在线索和奖励。在访谈前使用电子药瓶记录六周的服药模式,为讨论提供信息。对转录的访谈进行分析,使用研究团队制定的编码生成主题,并选择代表性的引述作为例证。
我们对15名个体进行了访谈(平均年龄60.6岁[标准差20.3],3名女性[20%],9名白人患者[60%])。药瓶记录的降尿酸治疗(ULT)依从性较高(平均0.91[标准差0.10]),1名患者正在经历痛风急性发作。出现了五个关键主题:(1)不依从的原因,(2)依从的内部和外部动机,(3)服药的结构化习惯,(4)良好药物依从性的奖励,(5)药瓶盖技术在服药中的作用。
一个可预测、结构化的习惯,让参与者能够将服药行为融入其中,这一习惯的重要性成为促进持续依从性的关键因素。此外,识别情境线索和提醒似乎促进了服药行为融入习惯。因此,利用情境线索围绕服药建立习惯的基于习惯的干预措施,可能是提高痛风等慢性病患者依从性的可行策略。