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Adhering to Medical Advice

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Title: Adhering to Medical Advice


1
Adhering to Medical Advice
  • Chap 4

2
Issues with Adherance
  • 125,000 people in US may die to adherence issues
  • Page 77

3
Theories that Apply to Adherence
  • Why do people fail to follow the advice of a
    health care provider? Several theoretical models
    that apply to behavior in general have also been
    applied to the problem of adherence and
    nonadherence.

4
Table 4.2Reasons Given by Patients for Not
Complying with Medical Advice
5
Table 4.1aPredictors of Patient Adherence
6
Table 4.1d
7
Table 4.1b
8
Table 4.1c
9
Behavioral Theory
  • The behavioral model of adherence is based on
    principles of operant conditioning, especially
    positive and negative reinforcement.
  • With positive reinforcement, a positively valued
    stimulus is added to the situation, thus
    strengthening that behavior and increasing the
    probability that it will recur.

10
Behavioral Theory
  • With negative reinforcement, behavior is
    strengthened by the removal of an unpleasant or
    negatively valued stimulus. Both types of
    reinforcers strengthen behavior, whereas
    punishment inhibits or suppresses behavior.
  • Advocates of the behavioral model use cues,
    rewards, and contracts to reinforce compliant
    behaviors. Some research supports the
    effectiveness of this approach.
  •  

11
Behavioral Theory
  • Advocates of the behavioral model use cues,
    rewards, and contracts to reinforce compliant
    behaviors. Some research supports the
    effectiveness of this approach.

12
Self-Efficacy Theory
  • Bandura's social cognitive theory is a general
    theory of behavior that stresses the interaction
    of behavior, environment, and person factors,
    especially cognition. Bandura used the term
    reciprocal determinism to describe this model
    (see Figure 4.1).

13
Self-Efficacy Theory
  • An important component of the person factor is
    self-efficacy, or people's belief that they have
    the ability to perform specific behaviors that
    will lead to desired consequences.
  • For example, self-efficacy was the best predictor
    of adherence to an exercise rehabilitation
    program.
  • Research has generally supported the importance
    of self-efficacy in health-related behaviors,
    especially the two difficult behaviors of diet
    and smoking cessation.

14
Theories of Reasoned Action and Planned Behavior
  • Ajzen and Fishbein's theory of reasoned action
    and Ajzen's theory of planned behavior both
    assume that the immediate determiner of behavior
    is people's intention to perform that behavior.
  • The theory of reasoned action suggests that
    behavioral intentions, in turn, are

15
Theories of Reasoned Action and Planned Behavior
  • (1) a function of people's attitudes toward the
    behavior, which are determined by their beliefs
    that the behavior will lead to positively or
    negatively valued outcomes, and
  • (2) their subjective norm, which is shaped by
    their perception of the value that significant
    others place on that behavior and by their
    motivation to comply with those norms (see
    Chapter 3, Figure 3.1).

16
Theories of Reasoned Action and Planned Behavior
  • The theory of planned behavior includes an
    additional determinant of intentions to act,
    namely, people's perception of how much control
    they have over their behavior (see Chapter 3,
    Figure 3.2). Both theories have been used to
    predict adherence to a number of health-related
    behaviors.

17
Theories of Reasoned Action and Planned Behavior
  • A meta-analysis of studies on the usefulness of
    the theory of reasoned action and the theory of
    planned behavior found that both theories had
    some value in predicting who will adhere to an
    exercise program and who will not, but these
    theories are only modestly successful

18
The Transtheoretical Model
  • The transtheoretical model of James Prochaska
    and his colleagues assumes that people progress
    through five stages in making changes in
    behaviorprecontemplation, contemplation,
    preparation, action, and maintenance.

19
The Transtheoretical Model
  • The precontemplation stage precedes intention to
    change behavior, and people in this stage may
    fail to see that they have a problem.
  • The contemplation stage involves awareness of
    the problem and thoughts about changing behavior,
    but the person has not yet made an effort to
    change.

20
The Transtheoretical Model
  • The preparation stage includes both thoughts and
    action, with people in this stage making specific
    plans about change. The modification of behavior
    comes in the action stage, when people make overt
    changes in their behavior.
  • During the maintenance stage people try to
    sustain the changes they have made and to resist
    temptation to relapse (see Figure 4.2). People in
    these various stages need different types of
    assistance in making changes. Research on this
    theory has indicated that these stages of change
    apply to a variety of health-related behaviors.

21
Figure 4.2The transtheoretical model and stages
of changing from a high-fat diet to a low-fat
diet.
22
II. Issues in Adherence
  • Two conditions are necessary for medical advice
    to be beneficial first, it must be accurate and
    second, it must be followed. A meta-analysis
    indicated a large difference in outcome for
    people who were adherent to their medication
    compared to those who were non-adherent.

23
A. What Is Adherence?
  • Because compliance connotes reluctant obedience,
    many psychologists prefer the terms adherence,
    cooperation, or collaboration.

24
A. What Is Adherence?
  • In an ideal world, the best definition of
    adherence would be cooperation, a word that
    implies a relationship in which both the health
    care provider and the consumer are actively
    involved in the restoration or the maintenance of
    the patient's health.

25
A. What Is Adherence?
  • However, cooperation is neither a common practice
    nor an accepted label for this relationship. The
    terms compliance and adherence are used
    interchangeably.

26
B. How Is Adherence Measured?
  • Researchers have used at least six methods to
    assess patient compliance
  • (1) ask the clinician,
  • (2) ask the patient,
  • (3) ask other people,
  • (4) count pills,
  • (5) examine biochemical evidence
  • 6) combine two or more of these procedures.
  •  

27
B. How Is Adherence Measured?
  • All approaches have limitations, but the least
    valid method is to ask the clinician about rate
    of patient compliance.

28
C. How Frequent Is Nonadherence?
  • The rate of noncompliance to medical or health
    advice varies with a number of factors, but a
    meta-analysis of over 50 years of studies
    indicated that the average adherence rate was
    about 25, but the rate was higher for some
    conditions such as HIV and arthritis but the rate
    was lower for conditions such as diabetes.

29
III. What Factors Predict Adherence?
  • Many factors that would logically seem to lead to
    compliance, such as severity of the disease, are
    in fact, poor predictors of adherence.
    discomfort.

30
III. What Factors Predict Adherence?
  • People with a serious disease are, in general, no
    more likely than people with a mild disease to
    seek medical treatment or to comply with medical
    advice.

31
III. What Factors Predict Adherence?
  • Although severity of the disease is a poor
    predictor of adherence, pain associated with the
    illness does seem to increase people's level of
    adherence.
  • When people suffer great pain, they have strong
    motivation to comply with treatments that might
    reduce their

32
A. Treatment Characteristics
  • Treatment characteristics include unpleasant side
    effects of the treatment and complexity of the
    treatment.
  •  

33
1. Side Effects of the Medication
  • Early research found little evidence to suggest
    that unpleasant side effects are a major reason
    for discontinuing a drug or dropping out of a
    treatment program.

34
1. Side Effects of the Medication
  • Recent research on taking drugs for HIV found
    that patients who experience severe side effects
    are less likely to take their medications than
    those with less severe side effects.
  •  

35
2. Complexity of the Treatment
  • In general, the greater the variety of
    medications a person must take, the greater the
    likelihood of nonadherence.
  • Doses that cannot be cued to meals or bedtime
    (such as four or five doses per day) result in
    lower compliance than those that can be cued to
    meals or bedtime.
  • In summary, the simpler and shorter the treatment
    schedule, the higher the level of adherence.

36
B. Personal Characteristics
  • Five personal characteristics relate to patient
    compliance

37
  • 1. Age
  • Age shows a curvilinear relationship with
    adherence, with older and younger people showing
    lower adherence. Older individuals have more
    barriers to compliance because they tend to have
    more complex medication schedules. As they grow
    into adolescence, children with chronic
    conditions such as diabetes tend to become less
    compliant.
  • 2. Gender
  • Few overall differences exist in compliance rates
    for women and men, but women are more likely to
    adhere to a diet that includes fruits and
    vegetables.
  • 3. Personality Patterns
  • No single personality trait shows any consistent
    relationship to adherence. Rather, non-compliance
    is more closely related to situational factors.

38
  • 4. Emotional Factors
  • Anxiety that is specific to the disease may
    improve compliance, but more general anxiety and
    stressful experiences tend to decrease adherence.
    Depression, however, presents a more serious
    problem for compliance.
  • 5. Personal Beliefs
  • When patients have high self-efficacy, they are
    more likely to adhere with medical
    recommendations. In addition, those who believe
    that they are personally responsible for their
    own health are more likely to be compliant.

39
  • C. Environmental Factors
  • Environmental factors exert an even larger effect
    on compliance than personal factors do.
  •  

40
1. Economic Factors
  • Income and socioeconomic status are important
    factors for health those with more resources
    have advantages in access to health care and
    often have the education to understand the
    advantages of adherence.

41
2. Social Support
  • Social support is one of the strongest predictors
    of adherence. People with a network of friends
    and family are more likely to adhere to medical
    advice compared with people who lack social
    support. Also, married patients are more likely
    to be compliant than those who are not married.

42
D. Cultural Norms
  • Cultural beliefs and attitudes are related to
    compliance. Cultural traditions that are not
    consistent with Western medicine lead to lower
    compliance.

43
D. Cultural Norms
  • Cultural factors and ethnicity may also influence
    how patients are treated when Hispanic American
    and African American patients feel discriminated
    against, their compliance rates are not as high
    as when they feel treated with respect.

44
E. Practitioner-Patient Interaction
  • Although personal characteristics are only
    marginally predictive of compliance, the
    relationship between patient and practitioner is
    a relatively strong indicator of patient
    adherence.
  • This factor includes verbal communication and the
    practitioner's personal characteristics (as
    perceived by the patient).

45
1. Verbal Communication
  • Perhaps the best predictor of patient compliance
    is the quality of communication between
    practitioner and patient. Physicians often begin
    their report with a diagnosis, which is likely to
    interfere with the patient's understanding of any
    advice that follows. Patients either fail to
    remember or misunderstand about half the
    information they hear.

46
1. Verbal Communication
  • Patients are most likely to comply when they
    receive reasons for their particular treatment as
    well as information about their illness. Health
    care professionals can improve adherence by
    giving information about the disease and about
    specific treatment requirements.

47
2. The Practitioner's Personal Characteristics
  • Patients' compliance improves when they see their
    providers as warm, caring, friendly, and
    interested in their welfare. On the other hand,
    when patients perceive practitioners as
    authoritarian or uncaring, adherence decreases.

48
2. The Practitioner's Personal Characteristics
  • Female practitioners generally exhibit more
    friendly behaviors, listen better and longer, and
    make more partner statements, all of which are
    positively related to high rates of adherence. \

49
IV. Improving Adherence
  • Failures to adhere to medical advice are common,
    making the goal of improving adherence an urgent
    one.

50
A. What Are the Barriers to Adherence?
  • Failures in adherence occur for a variety of
    reasons.
  • Following a doctor's advice is complicated by a
    number of factors, such as not correctly hearing
    that advice, failing to understand the advice,
    seeing the regimen as too difficult,
    time-consuming, or expensive, and stopping
    medication when the symptoms go away.

51
A. What Are the Barriers to Adherence?
  • Many patients have an optimistic bias, believing
    that they will be spared the serious consequence
    of noncompliance.
  • Considering a broad definition of adherence that
    includes a healthy and safe lifestyle, complete
    adherence is difficult most people fail in some
    ways to eat a healthy diet, refrain from smoking,
    drink alcohol moderately, participate in physical
    activity, keep medical and dental appointments,
    participate in appropriate health screening and
    tests, and so forth.

52
B. How Can Adherence Be Improved?
  • Health care providers have attempted to improve
    patient adherence through the use of both
    educational and behavioral strategies.
    Educational procedures that impart information
    boost knowledge but do not usually result in
    increased compliance.

53
B. How Can Adherence Be Improved?
  • Behavioral strategies are more effective. These
    strategies include prompts that serve as
    reminders, such as emails or telephone calls.
  • Tailoring the regimen to fit the patients
    schedule is another strategy, and the technique
    of motivational interviewing fits into this
    approach.

54
B. How Can Adherence Be Improved?
  • A gradual implementation of the regimen can help
    shape people toward compliance, and a written
    contract clearly specifying behaviors for both
    patient and provider can be effective.

55
B. How Can Adherence Be Improved?
  • Clear instructions are the single best approach
    to improving adherence, but combinations of
    techniques are even more effective in boosting
    compliance.
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