| Literature DB >> 34275114 |
Mathias Schlögl1,2, Regina Elisabeth Roller-Wirnsberger3, Susanne Sørensen Hernes4,5, Stany Perkisas6, Marit Stordal Bakken7,5, Stéphanie Miot8,9, Cafer Balci10, Melanie Dani11, Hanna Pajulammi12, Paolo Piaggi13, Clara Drenth-van Maanen14,15, Katrin Singler16,17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Polypharmacy is becoming increasingly common and all doctors must be prepared to manage it competently. AIMS: The aim of this project is to evaluate the feasibility and use of a novel gamification-based teaching intervention on polypharmacy among doctors undergoing advanced geriatric training. Among others, one of the learning goals for the students was to be able to describe the adherence to medication.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Gamification; M&M game; Medical; Polypharmacy; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34275114 PMCID: PMC8847288 DOI: 10.1007/s40520-021-01933-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Clin Exp Res ISSN: 1594-0667 Impact factor: 3.636
The applied medication plan
| Medication | Dose | Diagnosis | Dose regimen | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Levothyroxine (25 µg orange, 50 µg brown) | 75 µg | Hypothyroidism | 1-0-0 | 30 min before the rest of the medication |
Furosemide (blue) | 40 mg | Arterial hypertension, ankle edema | 1-1-0 | |
Ramipril (brown) | 5 mg | Arterial hypertension | 1-0-1 | |
Aspirin (yellow) | 100 mg | Coronary heart disease | 0-1-0 | |
Ibuprofen (Green) | 600 mg | Knee pain, activated osteoarthritis | 2×/day | Gap minimal 6 h, gap between Aspirin and Ibuprofen minimal 2 h |
Alendronic acid (yellow) | 70 mg | Osteoporosis | 1×/week (Wednesday) | After intake of the drug stay in an upright position for minimal 30 min |
Cholecalciferol (red) | 1000 I.E | Osteoporosis | 1-0-0 | |
Pantoprazole (orange) | 20 mg | Stomach protection | 0-0-0-1 | As long as ibuprofen is on the medication plan |
Fig. 1Theoretical framework. Based on the experiential design of the game follows Kolb’s original learning cycle [22], the teacher acts as a facilitator within the constructive framework, utilizing some connective elements. The participants were supposed to drive their learning forward by their own reflection, and the collective knowledge within the group.
Examples of the practical factors to medication adherence which contain practical barriers and their included factors
| Theme number | Practical barrier category | Included factors |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Formulation | –Taste, shape or size of tablets –Shape of tablets –Size of tablets –Swallowing difficulties –Inconvenience caused by injections (e.g., pain, bleeding, scars) |
| 2 | Instructions for use | –Dosing frequency –Total number of medicines needed to take –Storage of medication –Medication during travel or outside work (transport/storage) –Restrictions whilst on the medicine (e.g., on food/diet/alcohol/driving) –Administration requirements (at time of administration) –Variable dose pattern –Side effect burden |
| 3 | Issues with remembering | –Busy schedule (e.g., time needed to take medication) –Difficulties establishing medication routine |
| 4 | Capability Knowledge and skills | –Reading and understanding dispensing labels –Difficulties with opening container/packaging –Not understanding health provider instructions –Calculating correct dose –Cutting pills to get correct dose |
| 5 | Financial | –Direct: cost of medication –Indirect: travel fares, monitoring costs to treat your disease/other costs –General financial difficulties: meeting insurance or medication funding criteria |
| 6 | Medication supply | –Pharmacy does not have supply –Patient has run out of medications –Needing to obtain refills or scripts –Not having medicine on hand –Not knowing where or how to get supply |
| 7 | Social environment | –Social influences impeding medication taking –Embarrassment around medication taking –Stigma associated with certain medication |
The representative quotation of practical barriers to medication adherence
| Practical barriers | Representative quotation |
|---|---|
Issues with remembering –Day 1: –Day 2: –Day 3: | • “I was late after the breakfast and forgot to go back in my room and totally forgot it at midday” • “I forgot one ibuprofen due to the lack of pain” |
Social environment –Day 1: –Day 2: –Day 3: | • “I did not take the medication at lunch and dinner because we were outside and I did not anticipated it” • “Again too busy day to remember the medications” |
Instruction for use –Day 1: –Day 2: –Day 3: | • “I think the timetable was not clear enough” • “I didn't understand why I have to take the medicine. I didn't have pain” |
Capability—knowledge and skills –Day 1: –Day 2: –Day 3: | • “I did not think I have to take the PPI” |
Medication supply –Day 1: –Day 2: –Day 3: | • “I forgot them in the room in the morning and did not have the time to get them afterwards” |