7 results on '"Ellis, Rebecca"'
Search Results
2. Thematic Analysis of Alzheimer's Medication Management Discussion in a Non-Moderated Online Forum.
- Author
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Liu, Jia, Meyer, Kylie, Glassner, Ashlie, Gonzales, Mitzi, Bartlett Ellis, Rebecca J., Park, Hyejin, Song, Lixin, Patel, Neela, and Wang, Jing
- Subjects
ALZHEIMER'S disease treatment ,PATIENT compliance ,HEALTH services accessibility ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,ONLINE social networks ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISCUSSION ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDICATION therapy management ,RESEARCH methodology ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,DRUGS ,DATA analysis software ,CAREGIVER attitudes - Abstract
Background: Managing medications for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias is challenging for caregivers. Information about caregivers' strategies to manage these challenges is needed to inform intervention development. Objective: This study aimed to understand caregivers' medication management experiences by analyzing online community discussions. Methods: Posts were extracted from the ALZConnected
® Forum using keywords "medication" and "drug" via web scraping. The researchers applied thematic analysis. Results: Four major themes emerged: (1) role transition of medication management responsibilities, (2) caregivers' uncertainty about medication purpose and values, (3) conflicts between the care recipients and caregivers, and (4) difficulty accessing and affording medications. Conclusions: The experiences shared on a non-moderated, unstructured online forum indicate that medication management is challenging and overwhelming for caregivers of people living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias. Since this is a progressive disease with various stages and changing needs, caregivers' strategies vary and are often limited by available resources and support. Health care providers should offer training and support for caregivers to navigate the transfer of medication management responsibilities and changing care needs as the disease progresses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Managing Medications and Medication Adherence Among US Adults During the Early Phase of the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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Ellis, Rebecca J Bartlett, Andrews, Angela, Elomba, Charles D, Remy, Laura M, Ruggeri, Sunny Yoo, Russell, Cynthia L, and Ruppar, Todd M
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PATIENT compliance , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MEDICAL personnel , *ONLINE shopping , *MEDICATION therapy management , *INTERNET pharmacies - Abstract
Purpose: Before the COVID-19 pandemic and the disruptions it brought, medication adherence was already a challenging and complex health behavior. The purpose of this study was to describe patients' interactions in clinic, pharmacy, and home contexts and associated medication management and adherence during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Patients and Methods: A survey questionnaire was developed using the Medication Adherence Context and Outcomes framework and distributed via social media between May and July 2020 targeting adults taking a daily prescribed medication. Survey questions assessed sociodemographics, interactions with healthcare providers, clinics, pharmacies, medication management experiences, habit strength, and life chaos perceptions during the pandemic. Medication adherence was assessed by the self-report BAASIS© scale to measure implementation, discontinuation, and overall nonadherence. Results: A total of 134 adults from the United States, mean age 50.0 (SD 16.1) years were included in this analysis. Respondents took a median of 3.50 (interquartile range 4) daily medications. Delays in seeing a provider were reported by 47 (35.1%). Pharmacy encounters were impacted; 25 (18.7%) indicated their method for obtaining medication changed. Medication nonadherence was reported among 62 (46.3%) and was significantly greater among those who delayed prescription refills (p=0.032), pillbox users (p=0.047), and those who experienced greater life chaos (p=0.040) and lower habit strength (p< 0.001) in the early phase of the pandemic. Conclusion: Although the early phase of the pandemic affected access to care for nearly one-third of the sample, distance-accessible care options and strategies to obtain needed services without being in-person supported respondents medication management. Helpful strategies included provider accessibility, telehealth, home delivery/mail-order, drive-thru's, 90-day supplies, and online/automatic refills. Methods to develop and reestablish habits are critical. Care providers in clinic and pharmacy settings can educate and remind patients about services like distance-accessible technologies and online ordering of medications and establishing routines to support medication adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Personal Systems Approach in Improving Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Patients
- Author
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Whittington, Melanie, Goggin, Kathy, Glasscock, Ernest L., Noel-MacDonnell, Janelle, Hathaway, Donna, Remy, Laura, Aholt, Dana, Clark, Debra, Miller, Courtney, Ashbaugh, Catherine, Wakefield, Mark, Ellis, Rebecca Bartlett, and Russell, Cynthia
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Adult ,Systems Analysis ,Health Policy ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Health Expenditures ,Kidney Transplantation ,Article ,Medication Adherence - Abstract
Interventions to improve medication non-adherence in transplantation have recently moved from a focus on motivation and intention, to a focus on person-level quality improvement strategies. These strategies link adherence to established daily routines, environmental cues and supportive people. The objective of this evaluation was to estimate the cost of implementation and the cost-effectiveness of a person-level intervention shown to increase medication adherence. To estimate the intervention costs, a direct measure micro-costing approach was used following key informant interviews with project champions and a review of implementation expenditures. Cost-effectiveness was calculated by comparing the incremental implementation costs and healthcare costs associated with non-adherence to the incremental percent adherent, defined as the percent of patients who took greater or equal to 85% of their medication doses, for each pairwise comparison. The intervention was low-resource to implement, costing approximately $520 to implement per patient, and was associated with significant improvements in medication adherence. These implementation costs were more than outweighed by the expected healthcare savings associated with improvements in adherence. This person-level intervention is a low cost, efficacious intervention associated with significant statistical and clinical improvements in medication adherence in adult kidney transplant recipients.
- Published
- 2022
5. Understanding Processes, Outcomes, and Contexts in Medication Adherence: The Medication Adherence Context and Outcomes (MACO) Framework.
- Author
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Ellis, Rebecca J Bartlett, Haase, Joan E, and Ruppar, Todd M
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PATIENT compliance , *MEDICATION therapy management , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *ECOLOGICAL models , *HEALTH behavior - Abstract
Poor medication adherence is a significant problem, yet interventions to improve it have been largely ineffective. Existing ecological models indicate that adherence is multi-dimensional; however, they do not reflect understanding of context-specific processes and how they lead to adherence outcomes. A framework that reflects context-specific processes is important because it could be used to inform context-specific intervention delivery and measure associated adherence outcomes. The purpose of this paper is to describe the Medication Adherence Context and Outcomes (MACO) framework, which includes contexts (ie, clinics, pharmacies, and home) and context-specific processes (ie, shared decision-making, prescription filling strategies, home medication management) that lead to adherence outcomes (initiation, implementation, discontinuation, and persistence). The Medication and Adherence Contexts and Outcomes (MACO) framework was iteratively developed between 2015 and 2018 based on theory, practice, and research and combining patient experience journey mapping to chronologically describe the environmental contexts and actions (processes) that occur within the contexts and how they contribute to medication adherence as outcome. The three distinct yet interrelated contexts described in the MACO framework are 1) clinical encounters, 2) pharmacy encounters, and 3) day-to-day home management. Within these contexts are specific medication management actions that occur (processes) in order to produce adherence-related outcomes (initiation, implementation, and discontinuation/persistence). The MACO framework distinguishes context-specific processes and outcomes. The MACO framework may be useful to understand at which point(s) along the continuum people experience problems with managing medications. This understanding is potentially useful for developing and delivering context-specific interventions that are based on processes that underlie nonadherence and selecting adherence measures appropriate for the contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Cost-Effectiveness Analysis: Personal Systems Approach in Improving Medication Adherence in Adult Kidney Transplant Patients.
- Author
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Whittington, Melanie, Goggin, Kathy, Noel-MacDonnell, Janelle, Hathaway, Donna, Remy, Laura, Aholt, Dana, Clark, Debra, Miller, Courtney, Ashbaugh, Catherine, Wakefield, Mark, Ellis, Rebecca B., and Russell, Cynthia
- Abstract
Interventions to improve medication nonadherence in transplantation have recently moved from a focus on motivation and intention, to a focus on person-level quality improvement strategies. These strategies link adherence to established daily routines, environmental cues, and supportive people. The objective of this evaluation was to estimate the cost of implementation and the cost-effectiveness of a person-level intervention shown to increase medication adherence. To estimate the intervention costs, a direct measure microcosting approach was used after key informant interviews with project champions and a review of implementation expenditures. Cost-effectiveness was calculated by comparing the incremental implementation costs and healthcare costs associated with nonadherence to the incremental percent adherent, defined as the percent of patients who took greater or equal to 85% of their medication doses, for each pairwise comparison. The intervention was low-resource to implement, costing approximately $520 to implement per patient, and was associated with significant improvements in medication adherence. These implementation costs were more than outweighed by the expected healthcare savings associated with improvements in adherence. This person-level intervention is a low-cost, efficacious intervention associated with significant statistical and clinical improvements in medication adherence in adult kidney transplant recipients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. SystemCHANGE™ Solutions to Improve Medication Adherence in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Secondary Data Analysis.
- Author
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Andrews, Angela M., Cheng, An-Lin, Bartlett Ellis, Rebecca J., Emerson, Amanda M., O’Brien, Tara, and Russell, Cynthia L.
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SOCIAL support , *KIDNEY transplantation , *CONTINUING education units , *REGRESSION analysis , *DRUGS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PATIENT compliance , *IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents , *STATISTICAL sampling , *CONTENT analysis , *DATA analysis software , *TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *SECONDARY analysis , *PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
The SystemCHANGE™ intervention has led to great improvements in medication adherence, which is a challenge for nearly one-third of kidney transplant recipients. This secondary data analysis sought to measure the frequency of individual solutions utilized by participants in a previously conducted randomized controlled trial of the SystemCHANGE™ intervention and to determine which classes of solutions had greatest impact on improved medication adherence. Solutions that were significant predictors of improving medication adherence to the 85% or higher level included alarm cues (p ≤ 0.0001), time cues (p = 0.006), restructuring the physical environment (p = 0.048), and social support (p = 0.023). Alarm and time cues, restructuring the environment, and social support were successful solutions largely influenced by personal routine and environment consideration that might be prioritized in future studies when implementing SystemCHANGE™. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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