Barriers and Facilitators to Medication Adherence among the Vulnerable Elderly: A Focus Group Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Setting and Participants
2.3. Data Collection and Analysis
2.4. Trustworthiness
2.5. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Main Category Perceived Barriers
3.1.1. Medication-Related Barriers
“…The problem is that those who can still remember and want to read the instructions can’t because the print is so small…” (3/3)
“Some people here also stock up, right… for example, when they are given those nice pills, they quietly put them in their pocket.” (1/8)
“… Sometimes people have a lot of medication at home, whole bags full” (2/4)
“…A multitude, really a multitude of medicines they have, and then they also buy what is advertised on TV…” (2/5)
“I have to say that what particularly bothers me is this propaganda, as the previous speaker mentioned, those alternative pills they advertise on television, and… people just… we buy this, we buy that… and… /…/ we fall for it, yes, don’t we.” (4/11)
“…The problem if you take more medicines, like four pills in the morning, and you’re always in doubt which to take first, what the time gap should be…” (4/8)
“…I have one person who injects insulin whenever they feel like it, regardless of the instructions…” (2/1)
3.1.2. Patient-Related Barriers
“…sometimes antibiotics are prescribed, but the person is too weak to swallow large tablets. Doctors should consider the patient’s condition and prescribe accordingly…” (2/5)
“… Forgetfulness is one of those things, especially when there are many pills, right… for example, we might tell ourselves, I will, I will, I know this, and so on, right… and actually, it comes to the point where, for instance, you forget to take some pills…” (4/10)
“…they can get confused with dosette boxes, taking all the day’s pills at once…” (2/4)
“They get medications but aren’t properly informed on how to take them. For instance, some medications shouldn’t be crushed…” (1/6)
“Many don’t know what their medications are for…” (1/3)
“From my late grandmother, I can say that she also had difficulty opening the medication… in the end, she opened all of them, mixed all the medications together… in the end, we no longer knew what what was…” (3/5)
“… they found out that I need to take medication for blood pressure… and I took it for a while, then for 3 years, I… I stopped taking that medication… for three years or two. And not even half a year passed, and I had a stroke… the first, the second, the third… because of the medication I stopped taking…” (4/1)
3.1.3. Barriers Related to the Healthcare System/Healthcare Personnel
“…some have these things really well organized, while others come from the hospital with discharge papers and such but don’t go to the doctors to review the therapy, whether it’s new or modified, right…” (1/1)
“…when new medications are prescribed in the hospital, someone should inform the relatives or the patient about what to discontinue and what changes have been made…” (2/1)
“Some don’t manage at all, even if they have a phone at home. They get confused by the automated systems and just hang up. They can’t reach their doctor, so they ask us to call for them…” (2/6)
“… let me tell you, when it comes to medication, the pharmacist is crucial… they have studied this, just like doctors… and pharmacists should… some give more advice, some don’t… something should change here… I have felt the need a hundred times in the pharmacy, for example, to consult with someone, but there’s no one… they just give you the medicine like in a store… and then you’re on your own…” (4/8)
3.2. Main Category: Facilitative Interventions
3.2.1. Medication Management
“… my partner, who goes to a specialist, and sometimes the medications prescribed by the specialist and the treating doctor conflict, this should not happen…” (4/11)
“…having a list, some had it when they went to the hospital or for an appointment, their personal doctor gave them a complete list… if they had it at home, maybe color-coded, morning is this color, noon that color, evening that color…” (2/3)
“…I have a suggestion… it would help if each patient had a sheet with the purpose of the medication, its benefits, and possible harms, written in large letters and highlighted with one color… some patients want to know about their medications but can’t read the small print, so a summary with the core information highlighted would be useful…” (3/3)
“…I had an idea that in the family, someone should be designated to pack the medications… everything else should be removed because I’ve seen… they have prepared medications, but if there are boxes around, some patients will still take from those too… so sometimes they take from both…” (2/6)
“… community nurse would then give me medication… in my opinion… well, this is my thought… this is the solution because we can’t always do what is common nowadays: ‘if there’s no one to give the medication, they should go to a nursing home…” (4/2)
3.2.2. Health Education
“They don’t understand… when we visit, we explain it in simple terms, unlike the medical jargon used in hospitals… so they can grasp it better.” (2/3)
“It’s important they understand, for example, ‘If you don’t take this, your condition will worsen. If you do take it, watch out for this side effect’. They need to weigh the benefits against the drawbacks.” (3/3)
“There is also a problem, for example, with the elderly that I notice, particularly those who have retention issues… some of them don’t want to take the pill because then they will urinate a lot, right… and then they get wet, and now it’s hot… so they tend to skip taking some pills, right… but then this leads to other health complications, right… and then a lot of explaining is needed.” (1/6)
“… It’s written in such a long way, and then the side effects, and usually, you don’t go through everything…you need support from professionals.” (4/7)
“Instructions could be clearer, not just for elderly, but for everyone. Medical terms are hard to understand, so people end up reading about side effects on forums online, which are often misleading.” (3/5)
3.2.3. Supportive Social Networks
“Many vulnerable elderly are left to fend for themselves… often because younger people are not interested in helping…” (2/1)
“In rural areas, community support is more common. For example, a woman from the local community took responsibility for a vulnerable elderly man’s medication management, and later, they even arranged for a caregiver and meal delivery…” (2/6)
“I think family members who are nearby should take responsibility for their elderly relatives’ medication. It costs nothing to visit your mother and ensure she is taking her medication correctly.” (1/1)
“… without our association, I can’t imagine how it would be, right… We also talk about medications, what kind of medications someone is taking… and those things, right…” (4/1)
“…otherwise, we also visit the elderly during certain occasions; New Year’s and so on… mainly, they need a word, a conversation, as they say… a kind word, a smile… offering that to them, talking with them, it means a lot to them, right… otherwise, even if not in person, we try to keep in touch over the phone or something like that…” (3/1)
3.2.4. Ensuring Continuity of Care
“For example, when a nurse sees a patient in general practice or in the hospital and notices something uncertain, they could alert us to make a home visit at the same time, to check on the patient.” (2/1)
“…then you phone the surgery, the GP, and the nurse says; now you’re going to send us more of these?…, that is, they’re overbooked, but …” (2/5)
“…sometimes you phone the doctor three days before, and he doesn’t finish the prescription, so the drugs are running out, and sometimes it gets disconnected, doesn’t it…” (2/4)
“Community nurses and home assistance can come every day if needed… if there’s no other option.” (4/2)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Main Categories | Categories | Codes |
---|---|---|
Perceived Barriers | Medication-related barriers | Medication instructions, difficulties in procuring, switching, and replenishing medication supplies, purchasing non-prescription drugs and dietary supplements, polypharmacy/excessive medications, problems with improper medication handling and refusal/discontinuation of medication |
Patient-related barriers | Physical difficulties and conditions, decline in general fitness and cognitive abilities, health literacy and ICT literacy | |
Barriers related to the healthcare system/healthcare personnel | Disorganized discharge from the hospital, (In)accessibility of a personal physician, disruption in continuity of care, communication | |
Facilitative interventions | Medication management | Medication review and regimen management, medication dispensers/medication lists |
Health education | Health education work with patients, relatives/significant others/close ones, improve health literacy and medication-related health literacy | |
Supportive social networks | Involvement of relatives and significant others (close ones), healthcare providers, patient associations and NGOs | |
Ensuring continuity of care | Arrange proper transfer of information between providers upon patient discharge to home/ensure continuity of care, assist patients in establishing contact with their personal physician, coordination and cooperation of all involved in the care of the vulnerable elderly |
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Horvat, M.; Eržen, I.; Vrbnjak, D. Barriers and Facilitators to Medication Adherence among the Vulnerable Elderly: A Focus Group Study. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1723. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171723
Horvat M, Eržen I, Vrbnjak D. Barriers and Facilitators to Medication Adherence among the Vulnerable Elderly: A Focus Group Study. Healthcare. 2024; 12(17):1723. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171723
Chicago/Turabian StyleHorvat, Martina, Ivan Eržen, and Dominika Vrbnjak. 2024. "Barriers and Facilitators to Medication Adherence among the Vulnerable Elderly: A Focus Group Study" Healthcare 12, no. 17: 1723. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171723
APA StyleHorvat, M., Eržen, I., & Vrbnjak, D. (2024). Barriers and Facilitators to Medication Adherence among the Vulnerable Elderly: A Focus Group Study. Healthcare, 12(17), 1723. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171723