Help and Adherence Flashcards

1
Q

How many people with symptoms actually seek help?

A

-1/3 of people

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2
Q

What do others do if they don’t seek help and why?

A
  • Self-medicate
  • Seek alternative therapies
  • They are desperate or don’t trust the healthcare system
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3
Q

Unworried and unwell

A
  • People who need care but don’t consult

- Actually sick but don’t think it is something to worry about

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4
Q

Worried well

A
  • People who don’t need care and are consultuing

- People who seek help for everything

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5
Q

What are the components of illness representations? (6)

A
  • Stress and coping responses
  • Identity/Label of threat
  • Cause (causal mechanism)
  • Consequences (perceptions of threat)
  • Timeline (acute, chronic, cyclical)
  • Control/Cure (Will meds help? Personality?)
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6
Q

How does personality relate to control/cure?

A
  • Those high in conscientiousness = stronger belief in effectiveness of treatment = seek help
  • Those high in neuroticism = believe the label is serious but do not believe in effectiveness = do not seek help
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7
Q

What is illness coherence?

A

-What are my understandings of this symptom/disease I have?

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8
Q

What do illness representations do?

A
  • Help to find out who will seek help

- Are they not seeking help because they are so scared or don’t think it is a big deal?

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9
Q

How does social influence affect health-related behaviour?

A
  • Mass media can influence what is thought to be normal
  • Advice from others
  • Organization of health care systems (ease of access)
  • Having opportunity (i.e. time away from work, no childcare)
  • Not interfering with other activities (i.e. having time, giving up fun time)
  • People won’t seek help if they think it is an inconvenience, or if there is a legitimate barrier
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10
Q

What is compliance?

A
  • The overt behaviour of one person that conforms to the wishes or the behaviours of others
  • Obedience to a request whether or not they believe in what they are doing
  • As soon as social pressure/force leaves = they quit
  • We don’t want this!
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11
Q

What is adherence?

A
  • A more active, voluntary, collaborative involvement of the patient in a mutually acceptable course of behaviour to produce a desired preventative or therapeutic result
  • Act on consensually agreed-upon plan
  • Had part in choice and designing doing treatment planning and implementation
  • Behave according to, follow in detail
  • Believes in what they are doing and doing the behaviour because they WANT to; accepts the importance of the behaviour
  • If you adhere because you believe and want to = extends length of the behaviour
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12
Q

What is the challenge with adherence?

A

-The healthcare system operates by putting limits on a time a person can spend with the physician, therefore physicians rush and person may not have time to ask questions they have; therefore harder time in believing the benefits

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13
Q

What is non-adherence?

A
  • The failure to fully comply with treatment recommendations for modification of a health habit or an illness state
  • Negative connotation
  • Not following what you are asked to do
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14
Q

What is creative non-adherence?

A
  • The modification or supplementation of a prescribed treatment regimen on the basis of privately held theories about the disorder or its treatment
  • tweak what you are prescribed because you have your own ideas
  • Not adhering to what doctor says because of aunt’s loyalty to juicing
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15
Q

What are reasons people use creative non-adherence?

A
  • Person can’t afford the treatment therefore tries to make it last as long as possible or shares with family
  • Confusion or concerns about the treatment (not fully understanding)
  • Supplementation of treatment because the person things it will help (i.e. detox)
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16
Q

What measurement tool is commonly used to measure adherence?

A

-Questionnaires

17
Q

How are the questions on the questionnaire tool?

A
  • Reverse scored questions (so people actually read them)

- Ask about behaviour change constructs (i.e. self-efficacy: “I found it easy to do the things my doctor suggested..”)

18
Q

What is the rate of non-adherence with medical advice? People who do not follow short and long term plans respectively?

A
  • 50%
  • 38%
  • 43%
19
Q

People who don’t stick to recommended healthy lifestyles?

A

-75%

20
Q

Dietary regimen compliance?

A

-30-70%

21
Q

What happens with exercise program frequencies?

A

-50% drop out within 6 months

22
Q

What type of data is better to get accurate reports?

A
  • Self-reported data versus pedometer data

- Actual data reports less activity than what people report they do!

23
Q

How do symptoms influence adherence?

A
  • Persistence (if given a treatment and symptoms stay, will you stay on it?)
  • Perceived as serious (serious = more likely to adhere)
  • Perceived as curable (will I get better if I adhere?)
  • Interference with other goals/activities
24
Q

How do treatments influence adherence?

A
  • Perceived to be effective (do I believe it is effective?)
  • Don’t interfere with other goals/activities (timing issues when you have to take meds?)
  • Not complex or difficult to adhere to
  • Short term (=better)
25
Q

What personal factors influence adherence?

A
  • Characteristics of the target person
  • Characteristics of the person giving advice (do they care about me?)
  • Normative influences (subjective/injunctive norms and descriptive norms)
26
Q

Subjective norms

A
  • Social pressure

- Do people who care about me want to do this?

27
Q

Descriptive norms

A
  • What do people like me do?

- If other people who have the same condition are doing this = easier to adhere to it

28
Q

What is concordance?

A
  • The collaboration between patients and healthcare professionals
  • The idea dream
  • Patient centred
  • Patient can ask as many questions
  • Needs time, expensive, and labor intensive
  • Tailor the treatment to the patient’s lifestyle, not the other way around
  • Beyond adherence
29
Q

What are the antecedents of adherence? (4)

A
  • Understanding
  • Memory
  • Satisfaction
  • Self-efficacy
30
Q

How does understanding antecedents?

A
  • Knowledge is necessary but not sufficient
  • Does the person understand what is being asked of them. the purpose, potential outcome?
  • Do they understand the what and why they are being asked?
31
Q

How does memory antecedents?

A
  • Do you actually remember what you have been asked to do?

- Event-based recall is more effective than time based (linking to an actual event e.g. take pills with dinner)

32
Q

How does satisfaction antecedents?

A
  • Easier to do something if you are happy about it

- Feeling satisfied with treatment = more likely to stick and adhere to it

33
Q

How does self-efficacy antecede?

A
  • What are the motivations for someone actually wanting to do this?
  • Measure self-efficacy for taking treatment and motivation to do so (maybe they don’t want to)
34
Q

What are the lowest adherence rates in?

A
  • Immediate discomfort or risk from the treatment (treatment not making you feel good = you will stop)
  • Bad symptoms from treatment (not making you feel good = will not take them)
  • Lifestyle changes are required (asking people to change diet, behaviours; more easy to take medications than change behaviour)
  • Prevention instead of symptom palliation (feeling better) is desired outcome/emphasized (DO “You are already feeling this, this will help you feel better)
  • Chronically ill who don’t see any immediate beneficial results from adhering (hard to keep something going on for long time/waiting for benefits)