Giletta Elaine, Hurley Vanessa B, Yang Yushi, Schwartz Jessica L, Jalalzai Rabia, Mollenkopf Nicole L, Mayne Raquel, Pitts Samantha I
School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Health Management and Policy, School of Health, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
J Patient Cent Res Rev. 2025 Jul 15;12(3):113-123. doi: 10.17294/2330-0698.2129. eCollection 2025 Summer.
We performed interviews with patients and caregivers to explore whole-person, whole-regimen information needs at times of routine outpatient medication changes. We categorized information needs in this relatively unstudied context and identified which needs were commonly recognized as insufficiently met.
We explored the content of the semi-structured interviews, which involved nine patients and two caregivers of pediatric patients, all of whom experienced a recent medication change in the outpatient setting of a large urban academic healthcare system. We used inductive thematic analysis to organize information needs into categories to identify key information gaps.
We identified five categories of patient information needs: (1) medication self-administration, (2) clinical reasoning informing the medication change, (3) pre-medication change expectations, (4) post-medication change behaviors, and (5) patient role and responsibilities in safe medication management. Through these categories, we highlighted five themes from which participants frequently described receiving insufficient information: (1) medication history, (2) anticipatory guidance about possible adverse effects, (3) self-monitoring and self-managing instructions, (4) safe information seeking, and (5) safe disposal of surplus medications.
Our findings illustrate patient information needs at times of ambulatory medication changes and identify vulnerabilities where these needs may be insufficiently met. Providing tailored information at times of ambulatory medication changes might support patient engagement with medication safety practices and ultimately reduce patient harm associated with adverse medication events. Further research is needed to confirm these gaps in larger studies and examine this question within special populations, including pediatric caregivers and patients with limited English proficiency.
我们对患者及其护理人员进行了访谈,以探索在门诊常规更换药物时患者对全人、全程治疗方案的信息需求。我们在这个相对未被充分研究的背景下对信息需求进行了分类,并确定了哪些需求普遍被认为未得到充分满足。
我们探讨了半结构化访谈的内容,访谈涉及9名患者和2名儿科患者的护理人员,他们都在一个大型城市学术医疗系统的门诊环境中经历了近期的药物更换。我们采用归纳主题分析法将信息需求分类,以识别关键的信息缺口。
我们确定了患者信息需求的五个类别:(1)药物自我给药;(2)指导药物更换的临床推理;(3)用药前更换药物的期望;(4)用药后更换药物的行为;(5)患者在安全用药管理中的角色和责任。通过这些类别,我们突出了五个主题,参与者经常描述在这些主题上收到的信息不足:(1)用药史;(2)关于可能的不良反应的预期指导;(3)自我监测和自我管理指导;(4)安全的信息寻求;(5)多余药物的安全处置。
我们的研究结果说明了门诊药物更换时患者的信息需求,并确定了这些需求可能未得到充分满足的薄弱环节。在门诊药物更换时提供量身定制的信息可能有助于患者参与药物安全实践,并最终减少与药物不良事件相关的患者伤害。需要进一步的研究来在更大规模的研究中确认这些缺口,并在特殊人群中研究这个问题,包括儿科护理人员和英语水平有限的患者。