| Literature DB >> 32895268 |
Mikkel Bring Christensen1, Anne Frølich2,3, Christian Ulrich Eriksen4, Stavros Kyriakidis5, Line Due Christensen6, Ramune Jacobsen7, Jannie Laursen8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to synthesise qualitative studies exploring medication-related experiences of polypharmacy among patients with multimorbidity.Entities:
Keywords: clinical pharmacology; qualitative research; quality in health care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32895268 PMCID: PMC7477975 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-036158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram providing an overview of the selection process. CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
Study characteristics
| Author (year), country | Title | Aim | Study design | Context | Participants | Analytical approach |
| Elliot | Strategies for coping in a complex world: adherence behavior among older adults with chronic illness. | Explore how older adults with multiple illnesses make choices about medications. | Semistructured individual interviews. | Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, a New England health maintenance organisation based in Eastern Massachusetts. | 20 community-dwelling seniors with health insurance, aged 67–90 years, 4–12 medications and 3–9 comorbidities. | Constant comparison method. |
| Fried | Views of older persons with multiple morbidities on competing outcomes and clinical decision-making. | Examine the ways in which older persons with multiple conditions think about potentially competing outcomes to gain insight into how processes to elicit values regarding these outcomes can be grounded in the patient’s perspective. | Semistructured focus groups. | Senior centres, physicians’ practices and a congregate housing site. | 66 participants aged 65 years and older, 5 or more medications, and a median of 5 chronic conditions. | Constant comparison method. |
| Holmqvist | Older persons’ experiences regarding evaluation of their medication treatment-an interview study in Sweden. | Explore and describe older persons’ experiences of evaluation of their medication treatment. | Semistructured interviews. | Primary care centres in southern Sweden. | 20 community‐dwelling older persons (age 75–91 years) with a mean of 7.3 diagnoses and treated with medication(s) on a regular basis. | Content analysis. |
| Krska | Issues potentially affecting quality of life arising from long-term medicines use: a qualitative study. | Determine the issues which patients taking long-term medications consider affect their day-to-day lives, including quality of life. | Semistructured individual interviews. | General medical practices in North West England. | 21 community-dwelling participants and 4–17 medications (average of 7.8). | Thematic analysis. |
| Linsky | Patient perceptions of proactive medication discontinuation. | Identify patient perspectives on intentional medication discontinuation to optimise medication use. | Semistructured individual interviews and focus groups. | Two US Veterans Affairs medical centres. | 27 participants with a mean age of 66 years, 5 or more medications, and visited primary care at least twice in the previous 2 years. | Modified grounded theory method. |
| Moen | ‘I don’t know how many of these [medicines] are necessary…’-a focus group study among elderly users of multiple medicines. | Conduct an exploratory study describing multiple medication use from the elderly patient’s perspective. | Semistructured focus groups. | Two largest senior citizens’ associations in Sweden. | 59 participants aged 65 years or older, and 5 or more medications. | The framework method. |
| Noël | Collaborative care needs and preferences of primary care patients with multimorbidity. | Explore the collaborative care needs and preferences in primary care patients with multiple chronic illnesses. | Semistructured focus groups. | Eight geographically dispersed primary care Veterans Health Administration clinics. | 60 participants, ranging in age from their 30s to their 80s, 8–27 medications, and 2 or more chronic illnesses. | Content analysis. |
| Patton | Improving adherence to multiple medications in older people in primary care: selecting intervention components to address patient-reported barriers and facilitators. | (1) Identify determinants (barriers, facilitators) of adherence to multiple medications from older people’s perspectives; (2) identify key domains to target for behaviour change; and (3) map key domains to behaviour change techniques that could be delivered in an intervention by community pharmacists. | Semistructured focus groups. | General practices from across the five Health and Social Care Trusts in Northern Ireland. | 50 community-dwelling participants aged 65 years and older, and 4 or more medications. | The framework method and content analysis. |
| Schöpf | Elderly patients’ and GPs’ perspectives of patient-GP communication concerning polypharmacy: a qualitative interview study. | Explore elderly patients’ and general practitioners’ perceptions of communication about polypharmacy, medication safety and approaches for empowerment. | Semistructured individual interviews. | Primary healthcare centre. | 6 participants aged 65 years and older, and 5 or more medications. | The framework method. |
| Summer Meranius and Engstrom | Experience of self-management of medications among older people with multimorbidity. | Explore the experience of self-managing medications among older people with multimorbidity. | Unstructured face-to-face interviews. | Either primary care settings or nursing homes in a municipality. | 28 participants aged ≥75 years with ≥2 medical diagnoses and living at home or in special accommodation. | Lifeworld-based phenomenological method. |
| Tudball | Challenges to consumers travelling with multiple medicines. | Examine how consumers residing in Australia experience and manage their multiple medications while travelling. | Semistructured individual interviews. | General practitioner surgeries and community pharmacies; consumer organisations; and various communication channels. | 35 community-dwelling participants, most aged over 50 years and taking 5–25 medications. | Constant comparison method. |
| Vandermause | Preserving self: medication-taking practices and preferences of older adults with multiple chronic medical conditions. | Examine the experiences of older adults with multiple chronic medical conditions when a new medication was added to their existing multiple medication regimen. | Hermeneutic unstructured individual interviews and self-assessment diaries. | Recruited by clinic healthcare professionals on receipt of a prescription for a new medication. | 15 community-dwelling participants aged 60 years and older, 5 or more medications plus a new prescription, and 3 chronic medical diagnoses. | Hermeneutic analysis, content analysis and parallaxic praxis. |
| Williams | Patient perspectives on multiple medications versus combined pills: a qualitative study. | To explore attitudes and practices to medication regimens among patients already in receipt of multiple medications, and to assess whether a combined tablet would be perceived as advantageous. | Semistructured focus groups. | Urban and rural general practices in Tayside, Scotland and in the South East of England. | 92 participants aged 40 years and older, receiving antihypertensive and cholesterol-lowering medications, and from 6 to more than 20 medications. | The framework method. |
GP, general practitioner.
Results of the quality appraisal using the CASP checklist for qualitative studies
| Item | Studies reporting the item, n (%) | References |
| Was there a clear statement of the aims of the research? | 13 (100) | |
| Is a qualitative methodology appropriate? | 13 (100) | |
| Was the research design appropriate to address the aims of the research? | 10 (76.9) | |
| Was the recruitment strategy appropriate to the aims of the research? | 12 (92.3) | |
| Were the data collected in a way that addressed the research issue? | 12 (92.3) | |
| Has the relationship between researcher and participants been adequately considered? | 0 (0) | – |
| Have ethical issues been taken into consideration? | 12 (92.3) | |
| Was the data analysis sufficiently rigorous? | 12 (92.3) | |
| Is there a clear statement of findings? | 13 (100) | |
| How valuable is the research? | 13 (100) |
CASP, Critical Appraisal Skills Programme.
Figure 2Syntheses. The figure provides an overview of the five syntheses, along with the categories from which they are formed.