scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Patients’ perspective of barriers and facilitators to taking long-term controller medication for asthma: a novel taxonomy

TLDR
A potential taxonomy of barriers and facilitators to adherence to long-term daily inhaled corticosteroids therapy that, once validated, may be used for planning a knowledge translation intervention and may be applicable to other chronic conditions.
Abstract
Although asthma morbidity can be prevented through long-term controller medication, most patients with persistent asthma do not take their daily inhaled corticosteroid. The objective of this study was to gather patients’ insights into barriers and facilitators to taking long-term daily inhaled corticosteroids as basis for future knowledge translation interventions. We conducted a collective qualitative case study. We interviewed 24 adults, adolescents, or parents of children, with asthma who had received a prescription of long-term inhaled corticosteroids in the previous year. The one-hour face-to-face interviews revolved around patients’ perceptions of asthma, use of asthma medications, current self-management, prior changes in self-management, as well as patient-physician relationship. We sought barriers and facilitators to optimal asthma management. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and transcripts were analyzed using a thematic approach. Patients were aged 2–76 years old and 58% were female. Nine patients were followed by an asthma specialist (pulmonologist or allergist), 13 patients by family doctors or pediatricians, and two patients had no regular follow-up. Barriers and facilitators to long-term daily inhaled corticosteroids were classified into the following loci of responsibility and its corresponding domains: (1) patient (cognition; motivation, attitudes and preferences; practical implementation; and parental support); (2) patient-physician interaction (communication and patient-physician relationship); and (3) health care system (resources and services). Patients recognized that several barriers and facilitators fell within their own responsibility. They also underlined the crucial impact (positive or negative) on their adherence of the quality of patient-physician interaction and health care system accessibility. We identified a close relationship between reported barriers and facilitators to adherence to long-term daily controller medication for asthma within three loci of responsibility. As such, patients’ adherence must be approached as a multi-level phenomenon; moreover, interventions targeting the patient, the patient-physician interaction, and the health care system are recommended. The present study offers a potential taxonomy of barriers and facilitators to adherence to long-term daily inhaled corticosteroids therapy that, once validated, may be used for planning a knowledge translation intervention and may be applicable to other chronic conditions.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The person-based approach to enhancing the acceptability and feasibility of interventions

TL;DR: The person-based approach to intervention development can complement theory- and evidence-based development and participant input into intervention design, offering a systematic process for systematically investigating and incorporating the views of a wide range of users.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers and facilitators of effective self-management in asthma: systematic review and thematic synthesis of patient and healthcare professional views

TL;DR: Perceived barriers and facilitators associated with reduced effectiveness of asthma self-management interventions were identified at the level of individuals with asthma (and carers), and health-care professionals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers to medication adherence in asthma: The importance of culture and context.

TL;DR: Disparities in controller medication use are pervasive and identifying the sources of these disparities is a critical step toward generating intervention approaches to enhance disease management among the groups that bear the greatest asthma burden.
Journal ArticleDOI

Barriers and facilitators of adherence to antidepressants among outpatients with major depressive disorder: a qualitative study

TL;DR: Perceived health benefits and having insight on the need for treatment were the most frequently cited facilitators in patients’ adherence to antidepressants among outpatients with MDD.
Journal ArticleDOI

The use of inhaled corticosteroids in pediatric asthma: update.

TL;DR: The key mechanisms of inhaled corticosteroid action; recommendations on dosage and therapeutic regimens; potential optimization of effectiveness by addressing inhaler technique and adherence to therapy; and updated knowledge on the real magnitude of adverse events are reviewed.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Using thematic analysis in psychology

TL;DR: Thematic analysis is a poorly demarcated, rarely acknowledged, yet widely used qualitative analytic method within psychology as mentioned in this paper, and it offers an accessible and theoretically flexible approach to analysing qualitative data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Handbook of Qualitative Research

TL;DR: The discipline and practice of qualitative research have been extensively studied in the literature as discussed by the authors, including the work of Denzin and Denzin, and their history in sociology and anthropology, as well as the role of women in qualitative research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Qualitative Research and Evaluation Methods (3rd ed.)

TL;DR: Patton as discussed by the authors suggested that if one had to choose between implementation information and outcomes information because of limited evaluation resoures, there are many instances in which implementation information would be of greater value.
Book

The Sage handbook of qualitative research

TL;DR: The Handbook of qualitative research (HOF) as discussed by the authors has been used extensively in qualitative research research, see http://www.handbookof qualitative research.huffman.org.
Related Papers (5)