Nalazite se na CroRIS probnoj okolini. Ovdje evidentirani podaci neće biti pohranjeni u Informacijskom sustavu znanosti RH. Ako je ovo greška, CroRIS produkcijskoj okolini moguće je pristupi putem poveznice www.croris.hr
izvor podataka: crosbi !

Drug and Medicinal Information Preferences in Diabetic Patients. Diabetes Care Iprovement through Evidence Based Pharmacy (CROSBI ID 618116)

Prilog sa skupa u časopisu | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija

Ortner, Maja ; Jadrijević-Mladar Takač, Milena ; Bates, Ian ; Duggan, Catherine Drug and Medicinal Information Preferences in Diabetic Patients. Diabetes Care Iprovement through Evidence Based Pharmacy // Periodicum biologorum / Vitale, Branko (ur.). 2001. str. 82-82

Podaci o odgovornosti

Ortner, Maja ; Jadrijević-Mladar Takač, Milena ; Bates, Ian ; Duggan, Catherine

engleski

Drug and Medicinal Information Preferences in Diabetic Patients. Diabetes Care Iprovement through Evidence Based Pharmacy

Introduction: Patients may not always have the same perspective of disease and treatment as health-care providers, indeed attitudes and behaviors towards treatment may affect the outcome of therapy. Studies have been shown that satisfaction with the interpersonal quality of the patient-providers relationship is significantly associated with adherence to treatment in diabetes (1). Previous studies have measured patients' desire for information and have shown associations between this, socio-demographic variables and patient satisfaction (2, 3). The aim of this study was to refine and further validate a patient-respondent scale for the measurement of information desires and anxiety about illness in a sample of diabetic patients. The results can be used to improve pharmaceutical care of this patient group. Method: The sample consisted of patients with a diagnosis of either insulin (IDDM) or non-insulin dependent diabetes (NIDDM). Standardised interviews were conducted in out-patient diabetic clinics and on medical wards at a London teaching hospital. The questionnaire comprised three parts: socio-demographic variables, a quantitative set of 21 Likert-response items and five qualitative open questions. Responses were coded and analysed in the statistical software program SPSS (quantitative) and QSR NUD*ISTv4 (qualitative). Results 101 were successfully recruited and interviewed, of whom 63 (62%) were NIDDM patients. The questionnaire items were examines using factor analytic method, with the resultant structure matrix suggesting one factor within each scale. The EID scale (''extent of information desired'') consisted of six items (reliability coefficient alpha = 0.7) and the AI scale (''anxiety towards illness'') five items (reliability coefficient alpha 0.8). Significant associations were found between EID factor scores and age, martial status, occupation and educational qualified level (p less than0.05). Patients with score low on the EID scale tend to be widowed, economically inactive and manual workers and with low educational qualifications. The AI scale scores were associated with ethnicity and occupation and separate non-white and lower sock-economic groups as more anxious about their diabetes. Conclusions: This study has verified the use of the EID and AI scales as potentially valuable tools to measure desire for drug information and anxiety about illness in diabetic patients. These two scales together can help health professionals to better target patients to provide appropriate medical information. This will increase patients satisfaction and better ensure their adherence to therapy. References: (1) Cichanowski P.S., Katon W. J., Russo J. E. and Walker E. A., The Patient-Provider Relationship: Attachment Theory and Adherence to Treatment in Diabetes. An. J. Psychiatry 2001 ; 158 (1):29-35. (2) Aston K., Carlsson J., Bates I., Webb D. G., Duggan C., Sanghany P. and McRobie D., Desire for information about drugs. A multi-method study in general medical inpatients, Pharmacy World & Science 2000 ; 22 (4):159-164. (3) Duggan C. And Bates I., Development and evaluation of a survey tool to explore patients perceptions of their prescribed drugs and their need for drug information, International Journal of Pharmacy Practice 2000 ; 8:42-52.

Drug information preferences; Diabetic patients; Desire for infrmation; Patients satisfaction; EID scale; AI scale; Pharmaceutical care

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

nije evidentirano

Podaci o prilogu

82-82.

2001.

nije evidentirano

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

Periodicum biologorum

Vitale, Branko

Zagreb: Croatian Society of Natural Sciences

0031-5362

Podaci o skupu

Third Cratian Congress on Pharmacology with International Participation

poster

18.09.2001-21.09.2001

Zagreb, Hrvatska

Povezanost rada

Javno zdravstvo i zdravstvena zaštita, Farmacija

Indeksiranost