Literature DB >> 9225407

Medication, chronic illness and identity: the perspective of people with asthma.

S Adams1, R Pill, A Jones.   

Abstract

The issue of compliance with prescribed medication has traditionally been dominated by the perspective of the health professional although increasingly sociologists, using qualitative methods, have begun to present the patients' point of view. However, little has been published on asthma, despite the numbers of people suffering from this chronic condition and the amount of medication regularly prescribed. This paper focuses on the perspective of a sample of S. Wales (U.K.) asthma patients who have all been prescribed prophylactic medication in the last 12 months and explores their attitudes to medication in the context of their everyday lives, using inductive qualitative research methods. Two main groups were identified: the deniers and the accepters. They differed fundamentally in their readiness to accept the identity of asthma sufferer which, in turn, was associated with very different beliefs about the nature of their problem and the meaning of the medication prescribed for it. There was also marked differences in their strategies of self-presentation and disclosure and their pattern of medication use, particularly for prophylactic medication. A third group, the pragmatists, were also identified as a possible sub-group of the accepter category who are less open within self-presentation and less consistent in their beliefs about asthma but do not reject the label entirely. Identity work, i.e. the way the respondents interpreted the social identity of asthma sufferers and managed to reconcile it with other social identities, is proposed as the most useful way of understanding the observed variation in the way people diagnosed as asthmatic conceptualise and use their medication.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9225407     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(96)00333-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  65 in total

Review 1.  Issues at the interface between primary and secondary care in the management of common respiratory disease. 3: Providing better asthma care: what is there left to do?

Authors:  R G Neville; B G Higgins
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 9.139

2.  Factors associated with hospital admissions and repeat emergency department visits for adults with asthma.

Authors:  R J Adams; B J Smith; R E Ruffin
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 9.139

Review 3.  Low dose inhaled corticosteroids and the prevention of death from asthma.

Authors:  J C Kips; R A Pauwels
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 9.139

4.  Guided self management plans for asthma. Advice should be simple and patient focused.

Authors:  M Partridge; G Barnes; D Price; J Barnes
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2001-05-05

5.  'The problem here is that they want to solve everything with pills': medication use and identity among Mainland Puerto Ricans.

Authors:  Wallis E Adams; Irina L G Todorova; Mariana T Guzzardo; Luis M Falcón
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2015-02-27

Review 6.  A systematic review of asthma and health literacy: a cultural-ethnic perspective in Canada.

Authors:  Iraj M Poureslami; Irving Rootman; Ellen Balka; Rajashree Devarakonda; James Hatch; J Mark Fitzgerald
Journal:  MedGenMed       Date:  2007-08-21

7.  Nebulizers in general practice--impending redundancy?

Authors:  A Jones
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  1997-12       Impact factor: 5.386

Review 8.  Qualitative research and evidence based medicine.

Authors:  J Green; N Britten
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-04-18

9.  Adolescent experience of psychotropic treatment.

Authors:  Jerry Floersch; Lisa Townsend; Jeffrey Longhofer; Michelle Munson; Victoria Winbush; Derrick Kranke; Rachel Faber; Jeremy Thomas; Janis H Jenkins; Robert L Findling
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2009-03

10.  A Scoping Review of International Barriers to Asthma Medication Adherence Mapped to the Theoretical Domains Framework.

Authors:  Isaretta L Riley; Bryonna Jackson; Donna Crabtree; Shaun Riebl; Loretta G Que; Roy Pleasants; L Ebony Boulware
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract       Date:  2020-08-26
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