| Literature DB >> 27599489 |
Hayden B Bosworth1,2,3, Stephen P Fortmann4, Jennifer Kuntz4, Leah L Zullig5,6, Phil Mendys7,8, Monika Safford9, Shobha Phansalkar10,11, Tracy Wang12, Maureen H Rumptz4.
Abstract
Medication non-adherence is a significant clinical challenge that adversely affects psychosocial factors, costs, and outcomes that are shared by patients, family members, providers, healthcare systems, payers, and society. Patient-centered care (i.e., involving patients and their families in planning their health care) is increasingly emphasized as a promising approach for improving medication adherence, but clinician education around what this might look like in a busy primary care environment is lacking. We use a case study to demonstrate key skills such as motivational interviewing, counseling, and shared decision-making for clinicians interested in providing patient-centered care in efforts to improve medication adherence. Such patient-centered approaches hold considerable promise for addressing the high rates of non-adherence to medications for chronic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: clinician education; motivational interviewing; nonadherence; person-centered approach; shared decision-making
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27599489 PMCID: PMC5215159 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-016-3851-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128