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Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens

PURPOSE: Poor adherence to cardioprotective medications after acute coronary syndrome (ACS) hospitalization is associated with increased risk of rehospitalization and mortality. Clinical trials of multifaceted interventions have improved medication adherence with varying results. Patients’ perspecti...

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Autores principales: Lambert-Kerzner, Anne, Havranek, Edward P, Plomondon, Mary E, Fagan, Katherine M, McCreight, Marina S, Fehling, Kelty B, Williams, David J, Hamilton, Alison B, Albright, Karen, Blatchford, Patrick J, Mihalko-Corbitt, Renee, Bryson, Chris L, Bosworth, Hayden B, Kirshner, Miriam A, Giacco, Eric J Del, Ho, P Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4521673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26244013
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S84546
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author Lambert-Kerzner, Anne
Havranek, Edward P
Plomondon, Mary E
Fagan, Katherine M
McCreight, Marina S
Fehling, Kelty B
Williams, David J
Hamilton, Alison B
Albright, Karen
Blatchford, Patrick J
Mihalko-Corbitt, Renee
Bryson, Chris L
Bosworth, Hayden B
Kirshner, Miriam A
Giacco, Eric J Del
Ho, P Michael
author_facet Lambert-Kerzner, Anne
Havranek, Edward P
Plomondon, Mary E
Fagan, Katherine M
McCreight, Marina S
Fehling, Kelty B
Williams, David J
Hamilton, Alison B
Albright, Karen
Blatchford, Patrick J
Mihalko-Corbitt, Renee
Bryson, Chris L
Bosworth, Hayden B
Kirshner, Miriam A
Giacco, Eric J Del
Ho, P Michael
author_sort Lambert-Kerzner, Anne
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Poor adherence to cardioprotective medications after acute coronary syndrome (ACS) hospitalization is associated with increased risk of rehospitalization and mortality. Clinical trials of multifaceted interventions have improved medication adherence with varying results. Patients’ perspectives on interventions could help researchers interpret inconsistent outcomes. Identifying factors that patients believe would improve adherence might inform the design of future interventions and make them more parsimonious and sustainable. The objective of this study was to obtain patients’ perspectives on adherence to medical regimens after experiencing an ACS event and their participation in a medication adherence randomized control trial following their hospitalization. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Sixty-four in-depth interviews were conducted with ACS patients who participated in an efficacious, multifaceted, medication adherence randomized control trial. Interview transcripts were analyzed using the constant comparative approach. RESULTS: Participants described their post-ACS event experiences and how they affected their adherence behaviors. Patients reported that adherence decisions were facilitated by mutually respectful and collaborative provider–patient treatment planning. Frequent interactions with providers and medication refill reminder calls supported improved adherence. Additional facilitators included having social support, adherence routines, and positive attitudes toward an ACS event. The majority of patients expressed that being active participants in health care decision-making contributed to their health. CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that respectful collaborative communication can contribute to medication adherence after ACS hospitalization. These results suggest a potential role for training health-care providers, including pharmacists, social workers, registered nurses, etc, to elicit and acknowledge the patients’ views regarding medication treatment in order to improve adherence. Future research is needed with providers to understand how they elicit and acknowledge patients’ views, particularly in the face of nonadherence, and with patients to understand how to empower them to share their opinions with their providers.
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spelling pubmed-45216732015-08-04 Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens Lambert-Kerzner, Anne Havranek, Edward P Plomondon, Mary E Fagan, Katherine M McCreight, Marina S Fehling, Kelty B Williams, David J Hamilton, Alison B Albright, Karen Blatchford, Patrick J Mihalko-Corbitt, Renee Bryson, Chris L Bosworth, Hayden B Kirshner, Miriam A Giacco, Eric J Del Ho, P Michael Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research PURPOSE: Poor adherence to cardioprotective medications after acute coronary syndrome (ACS) hospitalization is associated with increased risk of rehospitalization and mortality. Clinical trials of multifaceted interventions have improved medication adherence with varying results. Patients’ perspectives on interventions could help researchers interpret inconsistent outcomes. Identifying factors that patients believe would improve adherence might inform the design of future interventions and make them more parsimonious and sustainable. The objective of this study was to obtain patients’ perspectives on adherence to medical regimens after experiencing an ACS event and their participation in a medication adherence randomized control trial following their hospitalization. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Sixty-four in-depth interviews were conducted with ACS patients who participated in an efficacious, multifaceted, medication adherence randomized control trial. Interview transcripts were analyzed using the constant comparative approach. RESULTS: Participants described their post-ACS event experiences and how they affected their adherence behaviors. Patients reported that adherence decisions were facilitated by mutually respectful and collaborative provider–patient treatment planning. Frequent interactions with providers and medication refill reminder calls supported improved adherence. Additional facilitators included having social support, adherence routines, and positive attitudes toward an ACS event. The majority of patients expressed that being active participants in health care decision-making contributed to their health. CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that respectful collaborative communication can contribute to medication adherence after ACS hospitalization. These results suggest a potential role for training health-care providers, including pharmacists, social workers, registered nurses, etc, to elicit and acknowledge the patients’ views regarding medication treatment in order to improve adherence. Future research is needed with providers to understand how they elicit and acknowledge patients’ views, particularly in the face of nonadherence, and with patients to understand how to empower them to share their opinions with their providers. Dove Medical Press 2015-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4521673/ /pubmed/26244013 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S84546 Text en © 2015 Lambert-Kerzner et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Lambert-Kerzner, Anne
Havranek, Edward P
Plomondon, Mary E
Fagan, Katherine M
McCreight, Marina S
Fehling, Kelty B
Williams, David J
Hamilton, Alison B
Albright, Karen
Blatchford, Patrick J
Mihalko-Corbitt, Renee
Bryson, Chris L
Bosworth, Hayden B
Kirshner, Miriam A
Giacco, Eric J Del
Ho, P Michael
Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title_full Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title_fullStr Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title_full_unstemmed Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title_short Perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
title_sort perspectives of patients on factors relating to adherence to post-acute coronary syndrome medical regimens
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4521673/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26244013
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S84546
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