| Literature DB >> 35659222 |
Pablo Perel1, Philippa Boulle2, Adrianna Murphy3, Ruth Willis4, Éimhín Ansbro4, Sahar Masri5, Nour Kabbara5, Tonia Dabbousy5, Sola Bahous6, Lucas Molfino2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We report findings of a qualitative evaluation of fixed-dose combination therapy for patients with established atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) attending Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) clinics in Lebanon. Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide, and humanitarian actors are increasingly faced with the challenge of providing care for chronic diseases such as ASCVD in settings where health systems are disrupted. Secondary prevention strategies, involving 3-5 medications, are known to be effective for patients at risk of heart attack or stroke, but supply and adherence are challenging in humanitarian settings. Fixed dose combination therapy, combining two or more medications in one tablet, may be a strategy to address this.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35659222 PMCID: PMC9167520 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-08040-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.908
Theoretical Framework of Acceptability [15]
| Construct | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Affective attitude | How an individual feels about the intervention |
| Burden | The perceived amount of effort that is required to participate in the intervention |
| Ethicality | The extent to which the intervention has good fit with an individual’s value system |
| Intervention coherence | The extent to which the participant understands the intervention and how it works |
| Opportunity costs | The extent to which benefits, profits, or values must be given up to engage in the intervention |
| Perceived effectiveness | The extent to which the intervention is perceived to be likely to achieve its purpose |
| Self-efficacy | The participant’s confidence that they can perform the behaviour(s) required to participate in the intervention |
Qualitative interview participants
| Participant group | Number (%, for patient group) |
|---|---|
| Male | 22 (69%) |
| Secondary education or above (vs Primary or none) | 9 (28%) |
| Non-switcher or discontinued | 7 (21%) |
Themes on acceptability and sustainability of FDC intervention, by participant group
| Construct | Theme | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Affective attitude | Makes life easier Fear of unfamiliar Lack of control | Treatment improvement | Perception of high risk Ok for the poor/uninsured |
| Intervention coherence | Attribution of side effects | Clarity regarding pill and how it works | |
| Burden | Easier than previous treatment | Early effort, long-term reward | |
| Self-efficacy | High capability to execute | Empowered by information | |
| Ethicality | Helps achieve patient goals | Fit with values/patient welfare | |
| Opportunity costs | Sacrifices treatment flexibility | ||
| Perceived effectiveness | Make patients feel better | High efficiency Improved efficiency | |
| Other | Trust in (MSF) doctors | ||
| Challenges | Dependence on MSF/lack of faith in external system Financial barriers | Inconsistent supply of drugs to clinic Lack of coherence Lack of transition plan | Background context (i.e. political, social, health system factors outside of MSF control) Changing established practice of clinicians Lack of commercial interest outside MSF |
| Supporting factors | Time investment Contextualisation of intervention within local health system and political circumstances. Intervention as advocacy | MSF as catalyst/precedent for change Stakeholder engagement Integration into health system Price/economic crisis as opportunity | |