| Literature DB >> 33547568 |
Timothy Ho1, Blanca S Campos2, Derjung M Tarn2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Good patient understanding of basic medication-related information such as directions for use and side effects promotes medication adherence, but information is lacking about how well patients understand basic medication-related information after their office visits.Entities:
Keywords: adverse effects; mixed methods research; physician-patient relations; prescription medications
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33547568 PMCID: PMC8606501 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06540-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Characteristics of Patients Newly Prescribed Medication; n = 81
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD; range) | 60.4 (8.1; 50–91) |
| Female, | 49 (60.5) |
| Education, | |
| High school or less | 14 (17.5) |
| Some college | 28 (35) |
| College graduate | 38 (47.5) |
| Race/ethnicity, | |
| White | 48 (59.3) |
| African American | 15 (18.5) |
| Hispanic | 12 (14.8) |
| Asian | 5 (6.2) |
| Other | 1 (1.2) |
| Health literacy score, mean (SD)* | 6.8 (0.49) |
*Health literacy score ranges from 0–7, with higher scores indicating greater health literacy[10]
Figure 1Frequency with which patients recalled information regarding newly prescribed medications immediately post-visit, by whether physicians mentioned the information during the office visit, n = 111 medications. Blue bars indicate accurate patient report of physician discussion; red bars indicate accurate patient report but lack of physician discussion; yellow bars indicate inaccurate patient report of physician discussion; and green bars indicate inaccurate patient report with lack of physician discussion. Dotted bars for side effects indicate that the patient reported the medication had “no side effects.”
Characteristics of Physician-Patient Interactions Associated with Patient Beliefs that a Newly Prescribed Medication Lacked Side Effects; n = 45 medications prescribed to 39 patients
| Characteristic of physician-patient interaction | |
|---|---|
| Physician did not convey potential side effects | 35 (77.8%) |
| Patient did not engage in conversation about side effect (e.g., no follow-up comment) | 20 (44.4%) |
| Multiple medications were prescribed during the office visit | 21 (46.7%) |
| Physician did not explicitly use the word “side effect” | 7 (15.6%) |
| Physician qualified discussion of side effects with “virtually none” or “generally well tolerated” | 5 (11.1%) |
| Physician used complex medical terminology | 1 (2.2%) |
| Patient told physician that they would not get side effect | 1 (2.2%) |