| Literature DB >> 27933181 |
Sam Howard1, Alexandra Lang1, Sarah Sharples1, Dominick Shaw2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Electronic monitoring devices (EMDs) are the optimal method for collecting objective data on inhaler use in asthma. Recent research has investigated the attitudes of patients with asthma towards these devices. However, no research to date has formally considered the opinions of stakeholders and decision-makers in asthma care. These individuals have important clinical requirements that need to be taken into account if EMDs are to be successfully provisioned, making collecting their opinions on the key barriers facing these devices a valuable process.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; Inhaler devices
Year: 2016 PMID: 27933181 PMCID: PMC5133420 DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2016-000159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res ISSN: 2052-4439
Sample size across the three rounds of the Delphi Survey with occupation demographics included
| Delphi round | Total | Consultants | GPs | Nurses | Pharmacists | No occupation provided | CCG/advisory board members (from the existing sample) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Round one | 31 | 8 | 6 | 9 | 1 | 7 | 5 |
| Round two | 18 | 8 | 3 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 4 |
| Round three | 10 | 3 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
CCG, clinical commissioning group; GP, general practitioner.
The 29 pros participants gave for electronically monitoring inhaler use, with the number of times each point was raised
| Pros | Sum |
|---|---|
| 1. An accurate record of adherence for clinicians/nurses/general practitioners to use in auditing and review | 24 |
| 2. Reminding the patient to use their inhaler | 17 |
| 3. For identifying patterns of inhaler use, for example, days, times, school, holidays, etc | 12 |
| 4. Aiding discussions between the clinician and patient, for example, visual evidence | 11 |
| 5. Improve compliance | 8 |
| 6. Reducing costs through less wasted medication and less time in hospital | 8 |
| 7. Relating an accurate record of a patient’s inhaler use to their health outcomes and asthma control | 7 |
| 8. Data for research | 6 |
| 9. Patient can see their inhaler use from home and know if they are underusing/overusing | 6 |
| 10. Patient has proof of their adherence to share with their clinician—increasing trust | 6 |
| 11. Increase patient involvement and motivation for treating their condition | 5 |
| 12. More informed decision-making for clinicians | 5 |
| 13. Better asthma control and improved quality of life | 4 |
| 14. Adding the ability to alert when the inhaler is about to run out would be beneficial | 3 |
| 15. Adding the ability to monitor inhaler technique would be beneficial | 3 |
| 16. Can be used to identify inhaler types that are less likely to be used—to ultimately find the most widely accepted and used inhaler types | 3 |
| 17. Increasing patient independence, accountability and self-management for their asthma | 3 |
| 18. Parents can check on their child's inhaler use | 3 |
| 19. The patient's awareness of monitoring by their clinician may improve their compliance | 3 |
| 20. ‘Cool’ technology may appeal to patients | 2 |
| 21. Could reduce exacerbations | 2 |
| 22. GPS would be beneficial in identifying triggers for a patient’s asthma, for example, pollen, pollution | 2 |
| 23. Could be used with other monitoring techniques, for example, peak flow | 1 |
| 24. Helpful for identifying dose dumping | 1 |
| 25. Increasing patient confidence in their care | 1 |
| 26. Long term—could be used to develop bio feedback | 1 |
| 27. Promote competition | 1 |
| 28. Useful data for emergency situations | 1 |
| 29. Useful to monitor adherence of different groups of patients on different treatments | 1 |
The 32 cons participants gave for electronically monitoring inhaler use, with the number of times each point was raised
| Cons | Sum |
|---|---|
| 1. Cost of devices | 32 |
| 2. Bulkiness and appearance may put patients off | 14 |
| 3. Patient may not like being ‘watched’ | 12 |
| 4. Accuracy and reliability of the device, as well as potential technical issues | 9 |
| 5. Concerns over the time and workload this would add to the consultation process | 9 |
| 6. Concerns if this is only compatible with MDIs | 7 |
| 7. Records actuation but not inhalation, technique, nor identifies if canister is empty or inhaler is shared | 7 |
| 8. Whose responsibility is downloading, processing and interpreting the data and discussing with patients? | 7 |
| 9. How is data stored and who has access? | 6 |
| 10. An EMD may be required for more than one inhaler per patient | 5 |
| 11. Evidence of the effectiveness of EMDs is required | 4 |
| 12. Cleaning and maintenance of the device | 3 |
| 13. Concerns about the role of pharma companies | 3 |
| 14. Could interfere with inhalation technique or not be compatible with spacer | 3 |
| 15. Data overload | 3 |
| 16. Ease of use—another thing patients have to learn | 3 |
| 17. Elderly patients may struggle with the technology or have a negative attitude towards it | 3 |
| 18. May make no difference to already unengaged patients | 3 |
| 19. May put patients off coming to clinic particularly if they have failed | 3 |
| 20. Paternalistic approach | 3 |
| 21. Added cost/time/workload of training clinicians and staff on how to use device, how to teach patients and how to interpret results | 2 |
| 22. Are there better alternatives, for example, Tele-health or Medication Possession Ratio (MPR)? | 2 |
| 23. Over-reliance on data—also need to determine reasons for non-adherence | 2 |
| 24. Patient may forget to bring device with them to clinic | 2 |
| 25. Patient resistance or refusal to use the device | 2 |
| 26. Patients may find the reminders a nuisance | 2 |
| 27. Bad for the environment—plastic and batteries | 1 |
| 28. Could create potential conflicts between the patient and their clinician or parents | 1 |
| 29. Many who get this device may do so as there are adherence concerns and therefore will show (inevitably) that adherence is poor | 1 |
| 30. More benefits for researchers than patients, meaning patients may fail to see worth | 1 |
| 31. Non-adopters lead to selection biases | 1 |
| 32. This will not address intentional non-adherence | 1 |
EMD, electronic monitoring device.
The top five pros rated most important by the participants (10=most important, 1=least important)
| Five most important pros (N=18) | 10s, 9s | 10s, 9s, 8s |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Better asthma control and improved quality of life | 9 | 13 |
| 2. Aiding discussions between the clinician and patient, for example, visual evidence | 8 | 15 |
| 3. The patient's awareness of monitoring by their clinician may improve their compliance | 7 | 14 |
| 4. Increase patient involvement and motivation for treating their condition | 7 | 12 |
| 5. More informed decision-making for clinicians | 7 | 11 |
The top five cons rated most important by the participants (10=most important, 1=least important)
| Five most important cons (N=18) | 10s, 9s | 10s, 9s, 8s |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Evidence of the effectiveness of electronic monitoring devices is required | 9 | 11 |
| 2. Records actuation but not inhalation, technique, nor identifies if the canister is empty or the inhaler is shared | 6 | 11 |
| 3. Whose responsibility is downloading, processing and interpreting the data and discussing with patients? | 6 | 10 |
| 4. Could interfere with inhalation technique or not be compatible with spacer | 6 | 9 |
| 5. Patient may forget to bring device with them to clinic | 6 | 7 |
The top three most important pros and cons for the two occupation groups with the largest samples—consultants and nurses (10=most important, 1=least important)
| 10s, 9s | 10s, 9s, 8s | |
|---|---|---|
| Consultants (n=8) | ||
| 5 | 7 | |
| 5 | 6 | |
| 4 | 5 | |
| Nurses (n=6) | ||
| 4 | 5 | |
| 3 | 5 | |
| 3 | 3 | |
| Consultants (n=8) | ||
| 4 | 4 | |
| 2 | 5 | |
| 2 | 4 | |
| Nurses (n=6) | ||
| 4 | 5 | |
| 4 | 4 | |
| 4 | 4 | |
The pros and cons that are related to the patient
| Patient-related pros | Patient-related cons |
|---|---|
| ▸ Reminding the patient to use their inhaler | ▸ Bulkiness and appearance may put patients off |
| ▸ Improve compliance | ▸ Patient may not like being ‘watched’ |
| ▸ Patient can see their inhaler use from home and know if they are underusing/overusing | ▸ An electronic monitoring device may be required for more than one inhaler per patient |
| ▸ Patient has proof of their adherence to share with their clinician—increasing trust | ▸ Ease of use—another thing patients have to learn |
| ▸ Increase patient involvement and motivation for treating their condition | ▸ Elderly patients may struggle with the technology or have a negative attitude towards it |
| ▸ Better asthma control and improved quality of life | ▸ May make no difference to already unengaged patients |
| ▸ Adding the ability to alert when the inhaler is about to run out would be beneficial | ▸ May put patients off coming to clinic particularly if they have failed |
| ▸ Increasing patient independence, accountability and self-management for their asthma | ▸ Paternalistic approach |
| ▸ Parents can check on their child's inhaler use | ▸ Patient may forget to bring the device with them to clinic |
| ▸ Patient's awareness of monitoring by their clinician may improve their compliance | ▸ Patient resistance or refusal to use the device |
| ▸ ‘Cool’ technology may appeal to patients | ▸ Patient may find the reminders a nuisance |
| ▸ Could reduce exacerbations | ▸ Could create potential conflicts between the patient and their clinician or parents |
| ▸ Increasing patient confidence in their care | ▸ Many who get this device may do so as there are adherence concerns and this will show (inevitably) that adherence is poor |
| ▸ Promote competition | ▸ More benefits for researchers than patients, meaning patients may fail to see worth |
| ▸ This will not address intentional non-adherence |
The pros and cons that are related to the clinician
| Clinician-related pros | Clinician-related cons |
|---|---|
| ▸ An accurate record of adherence for clinicians/nurses/general practitioners to use in auditing and review | ▸ Concerns over the time and workload this would add to the consultation process |
| ▸ For identifying patterns of inhaler use, for example, days, times, school, holidays, etc | ▸ Whose responsibility is downloading, processing and interpreting the data and discussing with patients? |
| ▸ Aiding discussions between the clinician and the patient, for example, visual evidence | ▸ Data overload |
| ▸ Relating an accurate record of a patient's inhaler use to their health outcomes and asthma control | ▸ Added cost/time/workload of training clinicians and staff on how to use device, how to teach patients and how to interpret results |
| ▸ More informed decision-making for clinicians | ▸ Over-reliance on data—also need to determine reasons for non-adherence |
| ▸ GPS would be beneficial in identifying triggers for a patient's asthma, for example, pollen, pollution | |
| ▸ Helpful for identifying dose dumping | |
| ▸ Useful data for emergency situations |
The pros and cons that are related to research
| Research-related pros | Research-related cons |
|---|---|
| ▸ Data for research | ▸ Evidence of the effectiveness of electronic monitoring devices is required |
| ▸ Can be used to identify inhaler types that are less likely to be used—to ultimately find the most widely accepted and used inhaler types | ▸ Are there better alternatives, for example, Tele-health or Medical Possession Ratio (MPR)? |
| ▸ Long-term could be used to develop bio-feedback | ▸ Non-adopters lead to selection biases |
| ▸ Useful to monitor adherence of different groups of people on different treatments |
The pros and cons that are related to practical factors
| Practical-related pros | Practical-related cons |
|---|---|
| ▸ Reducing costs through less wasted medication and less time in hospital | ▸ Cost of devices |
| ▸ Could be used with other monitoring techniques, for example, peak flow | ▸ Accuracy and reliability of the device, as well as potential technical issues |
| ▸ Concerns if this is only compatible with MDIs | |
| ▸ Records actuation but not inhalation, technique, nor identifies if canister is empty or inhaler is shared | |
| ▸ How is data stored and who has access? | |
| ▸ Cleaning and maintenance of the device | |
| ▸ Concerns about the role of pharma companies | |
| ▸ Could interfere with inhalation technique or not be compatible with spacer | |
| ▸ Bad for the environment—plastic and batteries |