Literature DB >> 31451052

Confronting Medicine's Dichotomies: Older Adults' Use of Interpretative Repertoires in Negotiating the Paradoxes of Polypharmacy and Deprescribing.

Alison Ross1, James Gillett1.   

Abstract

To address the risks associated with polypharmacy, health care providers are investigating the feasibility of deprescribing programs as part of routine medical care to reduce medication burden to older adults. As older adults are enrolled in these programs, they are confronted with two dominant and legitimate accounts of medications, labeled the medication paradox: medications keep you healthy but they might be making you sick. We investigated how the medication paradox operates in the lives of older adults. In-depth qualitative interviews were conducted and analyzed with older adults aged 70+ to identify the various paradoxes that seniors live through regarding their medications and the narratives that they engage to negotiate these contradictions. Older adults were found to have established interpretative repertoires to make sense of the incongruent narratives of the medication paradox. In this article, we demonstrate older adults' efforts to carve out their unique place in the dichotomized institution of medicine.

Keywords:  Hamilton; Ontario; deprescribing; interpretative repertoire; older adults; paradox; polypharmacy; qualitative interviews

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31451052     DOI: 10.1177/1049732319868981

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Health Res        ISSN: 1049-7323


  2 in total

Review 1.  Deprescribing medicines in older people living with multimorbidity and polypharmacy: the TAILOR evidence synthesis.

Authors:  Joanne Reeve; Michelle Maden; Ruaraidh Hill; Amadea Turk; Kamal Mahtani; Geoff Wong; Dan Lasserson; Janet Krska; Dee Mangin; Richard Byng; Emma Wallace; Ed Ranson
Journal:  Health Technol Assess       Date:  2022-07       Impact factor: 4.106

2.  Dealing with being prescribed cardiovascular preventive medication: a narrative analysis of qualitative interviews with patients with recent acute coronary heart disease in Sweden.

Authors:  Josabeth Hultberg; Staffan Nilsson; Carl Edvard Rudebeck; Anita Kärner Köhler
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-12-17       Impact factor: 2.692

  2 in total

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