SCRIPT: adherence Flashcards

1
Q

Oxybutynin may cause what side effects?

A

Antimuscarinic.

  • Urinary retention (used to treat OAB)
  • Constipation
  • Dry eyes and dry mouth/throat
  • Cognitive impairment (may result in poor medication adherence)
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2
Q

Define.

a) Adherence
b) Compliance
c) Concordance

A

a) The extent to which the patient’s behaviour matches agreed (shared) recommendations from the prescriber
b) The extent to which the patient’s behaviour matches the prescriber’s recommendations (not shared - didactic)
c) The belief that patient and prescriber must come to an agreement on healthcare decision. This influences medicines taking behaviours

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3
Q

Reasons for non-adherence (WHO).

A
  • Social/economic factors (e.g. age, gender, an inability to pay for medicines)
  • Health system/health care team (HCT) factors (e.g. the poor quality of instructions provided to the patient)
  • Therapy-related factors (e.g. adverse effects of medicines, complexity of drug regimens)
  • Patient-related factors (e.g. patient disagreement with the necessity for treatment, low self-esteem)
  • Condition-related factors (e.g. dysphagia in myasthenia gravis)
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4
Q

Two types of non-adherence

A
  • Intentional non-adherence: the patient makes a conscious decision not to follow treatment recommendations.
  • Unintentional non-adherence: the patient wants to follow the treatment instructions but is prevented from doing so by certain factors.
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5
Q

What information to provide patient when prescribing a medication?

A
  • What the medicine is and how to take it.
  • The likely benefits of treatment.
  • Any adverse effects and the likelihood of these occurring.
  • What to do should any adverse effects occur (this is particularly important in instances where immediate cessation of medicine-taking could result in harm to the patient e.g. beta-blockers, MAOIs).
  • What to do if they miss a dose.
  • Expected duration of treatment (will another prescription be needed?)
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6
Q

Interventions to improve adherence

A
  • Medication: simplify regimen (eg. twice daily to once daily), change drug, blister packs/Nomads
  • Rewards for success
  • Monitoring: close follow-up, manual telephone follow-up, supervised self-monitoring, reminders
  • Therapy: counselling, family therapy, couple-focused therapy, psychological therapy, crisis intervention
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7
Q

Help with prescription costs

A

Free prescriptions.

  • Age < 18 (in full time education) or > 60
  • Pregnancy and up to 12 months post-partum
  • Certain medical conditions
  • NHS inpatient
  • Unemployed

Prescription Pre-Payment Certificates (PPC):
- Eligible if having to pay for 3 medicines over 3 months or 12 in 12 months (but who do not get free prescriptions)

NHS Low Income Scheme
- HC1, HC2 or HC3 forms

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