Memory and Adherence to Treatment Flashcards

1
Q

How much information do patients forget from their doctor

A

About 50%

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2
Q

Stability Bias

A

People expect to remember things and feel confident when in fact they are likely to forget

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3
Q

Types of Memory

A

Sensory Memory - Ability to process and recall what you experience at present moment; Unattended information is lost quickly

Short Term Memory - When attention is paid to sensory memory; Unrehearsed memory is lost; rehearsed is maintained; Limited Capacity

Long Term Memory - Rehearsed short term memory; can be retrieved back to short term memory if needed; some information lost over time

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4
Q

Semantic Effect

A

Feature of long term memory

Things that are conceptually similar are grouped together

(e.g. Aunt and Uncle)

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5
Q

Accoustic Coding

A

Feature of short term memory

Thigns that sound similar are grouped (e.g. cat and hat)

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6
Q

Primacy and Recency Effect effect

A

Feature of long term memory

Information from the beginning of an event are stored more efficiently in long term memory, information at the end are stored efficiently in working memory, leaving the intermediate to struggle

Think of performing concerts

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7
Q

How to incorporate memory fallibility into patient care

A

Organise experience into ‘chapters’ to allow each chapter to move to long term

Less is more - focus on key aspects

Tell patients what is important to remember so they rehearse it

Precise information
(Older people remember the gist though)

Create dialogue so patient is active

Exploit primacy and recency effects

Associate info with visual aids

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8
Q

Study of Godden and Baddeley

A

Divers were given lists of words to learn and recall in 4 conditions

Learn on either land or underwater; Recall in land or underwater

Those learning and recalling in same remembered more than those in different places due to reinstatement of context

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9
Q

Adherence

A

Following advice given by health professionals

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10
Q

Direct vs Indirect methods of measuring adherence

A

Direct is stuff like watching them do it or measuring levels of x in their urine/blood

Indirect is stuff like patient diaries or asking them or maybe even just pill counts

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11
Q

Forms of non-adherence

A

Failure to make lifestyle changes
Failure to attend appointments
Failure to take medicationat all/at the right time

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12
Q

What is one factor that affects rate of adherence

A

Complexity of medication schedule

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13
Q

Barriers to Adherence

A
Convenience
Cost
Side Effects
Poor Knowledge
Depression
Stress/Anxiety
Life stage transitionn
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14
Q

Peiple who failed to adhere

A

Younger
More chaotic Lives
Worried about side effect (education can help)

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15
Q

How to promote adherence

A

Firstly consider non-adherence verbally and ask for compliance
Empathise with patient
Create climate where patients can discuss non-adherence
Take interest in their life and try fit in treatment
Improve communication and signpost to further information

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