Strategies for coping in a complex world: adherence behavior among older adults with chronic illness.

View Abstract

BACKGROUND

Increasing numbers of medicines increase nonadherence. Little is known about how older adults manage multiple medicines for multiple illnesses.

OBJECTIVES

To explore how older adults with multiple illnesses make choices about medicines.

DESIGN

Semistructured interviews with older adults taking several medications. Accounts of respondents' medicine-taking behavior were collected.

PARTICIPANTS

Twenty community-dwelling seniors with health insurance, in Eastern Massachusetts, aged 67-90, (4-12 medicines, 3-9 comorbidities).

APPROACH

Qualitative analysis using constant comparison to explain real choices made about medicines in the past ("historical") and hypothetical ("future") choices.

RESULTS

Respondents reported both past ("historical") choices and hypothetical ("future") choices between medicines. Although people discussed effectiveness and future risk of the disease when prompted to prioritize their medicines (future choices), key factors leading to nonadherence (historical choices) were costs and side effects. Specific choices were generally dominated by 1 factor, and respondents rarely reported making explicit trade-offs between different factors. Factors affecting 1 choice were not necessarily the same as those affecting another choice in the same person. There was no evidence of "adherent" personalities.

CONCLUSION

Prescribing a new medicine, a change in provider or copayment can provoke new choices about both new and existing medications in older adults with multiple morbidities.

Abbreviation
J Gen Intern Med
Publication Date
2007-06-01
Volume
22
Issue
6
Page Numbers
805-10
Pubmed ID
17406952
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Strategies for coping in a complex world: adherence behavior among older adults with chronic illness.
Authors
Elliott RA, Ross-Degnan D, Adams AS, Safran DG, Soumerai SB