Literature DB >> 15823778

Asthma treatment needs: a comparison of patients' and health care professionals' perceptions.

Michael E Hyland1, Elisabeth Ståhl.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients' perceptions of asthma tend to differ from those of clinicians, who primarily focus on asthma control. Patients' treatment needs and preferences may not be adequately addressed.
OBJECTIVE: The aims of this study were as follows: to provide data on unmet treatment needs and to investigate the main finding of a qualitative study using a questionnaire study.
METHODS: To assess treatment needs in patients with asthma, focus groups were conducted with patients/parents and clinicians. Based on these results, quantitative surveys of adult patients and parents were performed in the United Kingdom, Germany, and Spain.
RESULTS: The UK focus group comprised 11 patients and 8 parents; in Germany, there were 10 patients and 11 parents; in Spain, there were 5 patients and 8 parents. The focus groups showed some differences between clinicians' and patients'/parents' perceptions of treatment. For patients, side effects meant long-term effects (ie, 10-20 years); for clinicians, it meant occasional local problems. The quantitative study comprised 454 participants: 310 adult patients (mean [SD] age, 37.13 [13.12] years) and 142 parents (children's mean [SD] age, 13.98 [1.37] years), plus 2 nonspecified. Some patients reported good asthma control and simultaneously reported frequent exacerbations. Most patients and parents expressed a preference for a simpler regimen using fewer drugs, and most had concerns about their treatment. Although some patients concurred with treatment guidelines, 62.2% tended to rely on reliever medication (ie, bronchodilators). Additionally, 6.9% described their asthma as very well-controlled but reported experiencing asthma symptoms > or =3 days per week. Finally, 1.9% of patients and 2.1% of parents reporting very well-controlled asthma also reported visiting the emergency department or calling a physician for a home visit in the previous 3 months.
CONCLUSIONS: Asthma patients and parents of asthmatic children had unmet treatment needs and may interpret medical terminology differently than clinicians.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15823778     DOI: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2004.12.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Ther        ISSN: 0149-2918            Impact factor:   3.393


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