Many persons with chronic health conditions fail to take their medications as prescribed, resulting in declines in health and function. Unfortunately, current interventions for medication nonadherence are not very effective. This objective of this study is to test a new intervention, the Integrative Medication Self-management (IMedS) intervention to improve medication adherence in adults with chronic health conditions.
Many persons with chronic health conditions fail to take their medications as prescribed, resulting in declines in health and function. Objective: The purpose of this study was to perform a phase I feasibility study to understand if an integrated occupational therapy intervention could help people with chronic health conditions improve their adherence to medications. Method: Using a small-N design, we report single-subject analyses of the medication adherence, behavior counts, and perceptions of medication adherence of participants before and after either an occupational therapy intervention or standard of care intervention. We used a multiple baseline approach with inter-subject replication, and blinding.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
34
Half of participants received a manualized 30-minute occupational therapy intervention, Integrative Medication Self-Management Intervention (IMedS). During IMedS, the interventionist and client progress through three steps in which the pair: 1) reflect on past performance of medication management, 2) set a medication goal, and 3) generate strategies to reach the goal. During strategy generation, the interventionist uses therapeutic use of self and motivational interviewing to help the client self-generate new medication management strategies, specifically addressing 1) altering the activity, 2) advocacy, 3) education, 4) assistive technology, 5) environmental modifications, and 6) securing timely refills.
The standard care educational intervention was a 30-minute pamphlet based educational session. In the standard care intervention group, participants and interventionist first reviewed the pamphlet, Managing Your Medicines: Our Guide to Effective Medication Management (American Heart Association \& American Stroke Association, 2013). Then, the interventionist engaged in active listening, where she asked open-ended questions about the participant's medication routines and provided simple reflections. For the standard care procedures, the interventionist was prohibited from providing affirmations, complex reflections, summaries, problem-solving, or suggesting any specific interventions.
Medication Adherence
Daily medication possession ratio via diary
Time frame: 4 Weeks
Self-perceived improvements in ability to mange medications
Participants at the end of the study indicate if they believe that their ability to manage medications has improved, declined, or stayed the same.
Time frame: 4 weeks
Strategies used to manage medications
Number of new strategies in daily life used to manage medications per participant report
Time frame: 4 weeks
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