16-11-21 - Common Sense Model of Treatment Flashcards

1
Q

Learning outcomes

A
  • Evaluate adherence to health care recommendations
  • Apply the CSMT to general prescribing and health care interventions
  • Understand the main principles of patient treatment beliefs and how they are incorporated into the CSM
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2
Q

What are illness beliefs?

Why are illness beliefs important?

What 3 things do illness beliefs allow us to do?

A
  • Illness beliefs are individual and acquired during life and during the course of an illness
  • Illness beliefs are important as they provide patients with a framework for coping with and understanding their illness

• Illness beliefs allow us to:

1) Understand how different people make sense of different illnesses
2) Predict health behaviours
3) Change health behaviours

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3
Q

What do good treatment outcomes depend on?

A
  • Good treatment outcomes depend on good medical care and self-management
  • Self-management relies on appropriate use of medicine by the individual i.e adherence
  • Adherence is vital for optimal treatment outcomes
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4
Q

What 2 things is appropriate use of medicine by an individual (adherence) dependent on?

What are some major predictors of poor adherence to medication?

A

1) Ability – e.g misunderstanding, forgetting, physical impairment
2) Motivation – the individual’s personal motivation to adhere to their medication. This can be influenced by treatment beliefs formed by exposure to information or past experiences

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5
Q

What are the 2 categories beliefs about prescribed medicine can be grouped into?

What are example of each?

A

• 2 categories beliefs about prescribed medicine can be grouped into:

1) Necessity – personal need for treatment

  • Examples:
  • ‘My health depends on this mediicne’
  • ‘These medicines protect me from becoming worse’
  • ‘Without these medicines I would be very ill’
  • Can involve beliefs about efficacy
  • Percieved nercessitt determine adherence more than treatment efficacy

2) Concerns – about negative effects of treaetment
• Can be concrete, abstract, relevant acorss a range of disease states and cultures

  • Examples:
  • Experience of unpleasant side effects
  • Disruptive effects of medication on daily living
  • Worries that medication could lead to long term effects
  • May be specific to a particular clas of medicine:
  • ‘Regular use of analgesic (pain-relief) medication will make it less effective in the future
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6
Q

What are 4 necessity beliefs that can affect treatment necessity and treatment options?

What are examples of each?

A

1) Identity
• Symptom experiences and expectations influence treatment necessity
• E.g severity of symptoms and absence of symptoms

2) Cause
• Putative causes (what is widely accepted rather than what is based on actual proof) may influence need for treatment options
• E.g illness believed to be caused from lack of nutrition, so seeking a change in diet instead of taking medication

3) Timeline and consequences
• Perceptions of illness duration and consequences may influence treatment necessity
• Perception of illness as cyclical instead of chronic impacts adherence to preventative medicine (e.g asthma)

4) Control
• Beliefs about treatment necessity correlate with beliefs how illness will be controlled
• E.g by treatment vs some other behavioural change

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7
Q

What might concern of treatment also comprise?

What else may there be concerns about?

A
  • Concerns about treatment may also comprise beliefs about illness representation
  • E.g symptoms (identity) may stimulate concerns if they are interpreted as evidence that medication is not working e. taking antidepressants
  • There may also be concerns about the necessity of treatment
  • This may be interpreted as a threat to self-identity
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8
Q

How are treatment beliefs and adherence linked?

A
  • Treatment beliefs are strong predictors of reported treatment adherence
  • E.g patients have treatment beliefs about chronic illnesses such as asthma and diabetes which will influence their adherence to taking their medication in order to stay healthy
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9
Q

What is illness representation?

A

• Illness representation is the patients’ beliefs and expectations about an illness or somatic symptom

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10
Q

How can treatment beliefs be integrated into the CSM?

A
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