多种长期疾病患者从医院到家庭过渡的药物自我管理的促进因素和障碍

IF 1.8 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Malin Olsen Syversen , Mikas Glatkauskas , Liv Mathiesen , Marianne Lea , Berit Gallefoss Denstad , Karin Svensberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景多重长期疾病(MLTCs)患者往往需要复杂的药物治疗,这对药物自我管理提出了挑战。护理过渡期间的药物自我管理往往受到沟通不足等挑战的阻碍,这增加了药物错误和不良后果的风险。目的确定MLTCs患者从医院过渡到家庭的药物自我管理的促进因素和障碍。方法在出院后1 ~ 2周到患者家中进行半结构化访谈。访谈记录和定性演绎内容分析使用每日自我管理策略分类(TEDSS)框架进行分析。数据收集继续进行,直到达到足够的信息量和意义饱和。结果21名患者和3名近亲属参与了调查。在所有七个TEDSS领域中确定了许多促进因素和药物自我管理的障碍,个体之间差异很大。资源和过程战略是讨论最多的领域,而健康行为和社会互动战略讨论较少。确定的关键促进因素是获得支持药物自我管理的资源和了解药物的目的。主要障碍包括患者认为药物负担沉重或不认识到药物的重要性。结论本研究强调了从医院到家庭过渡的MLTCs患者药物自我管理的促进因素和障碍的复杂性和广广性。在临床实践中,可以通过适应个体患者日常生活的整体方法来支持患者的药物自我管理,包括改善护理协调和患者赋权。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Facilitators and barriers to medication self-management for patients with multiple long-term conditions transitioning from hospital to home

Background

Being a patient with multiple long-term conditions (MLTCs) often entails a need for complex medication treatment, which poses a challenge to medication self-management. Medication self-management during transition of care is often hindered by challenges such as inadequate communication, which increases the risk of medication errors and adverse outcomes.

Aim

Identify facilitators and barriers to medication self-management for patients with MLTCs transitioning from hospital to home.

Methods

Semi-structured interviews were conducted in patient's homes 1–2 weeks after hospital discharge. Interviews were transcribed and analysed by qualitative deductive content analysis using the Taxonomy of Every Day Self-management Strategies (TEDSS) framework. The data collection continued until enough information power and meaning saturation was reached.

Results

Twenty-one patients and three next of kin participated. Numerous facilitators and barriers to medication self-management were identified within all seven TEDSS domains, which varied extensively between individuals. Resource and process strategies were the most frequently discussed domains, while health behaviour and social interaction strategies were less frequently discussed. Key facilitators identified were access to resources that support medication self-management and knowing the medication's purpose. Key barriers included patients perceiving medications as burdensome or not recognising the importance of their medications.

Conclusions

This study highlights the complex and wide spectre of facilitators and barriers to medication self-management for patients with MLTCs transitioning from hospital to home. In clinical practice, patients' medication self-management could be supported through a holistic approach adapted to the individual patient's daily life, including improved care coordination and patient empowerment.
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CiteScore
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