Facilitators and Barriers of Medication Adherence Based on Beliefs of Persons with Bipolar Disorder: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Categorization and Analysis of the Data
3. Results
3.1. Key Topic Categories
3.2. Perceived Barriers in Relation to the Pharmacological Treatment of Participants with Bipolar Disorder
3.3. Perceived Facilitators Related to the Pharmacological Treatment of Participants with Bipolar Disorder
3.4. Relationship between Barriers and Facilitators in the Acute and Chronic Phase of Bipolar Disorder
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
BD | bipolar disorder |
YMRS | Young Mania Rating Scale |
MADRS | Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale |
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Treatment | Acute phase |
Maintenance | |
Polarity | Mania |
Depression | |
Adherence | Barriers |
Facilitators |
n | 36 |
---|---|
% women | 55% |
Average age | 40.2 years (sd 5.42) |
Job | Employed 27.77%; unemployed 38.88%; retired 5.55% |
Years of evolution of BD (average) | 7.4 years (sd 1.04) |
Average Young Scale | 0.15 (sd 0.03) |
Average MADRS Scale | 2.36 (sd 1.12) |
Average COBRA | 6.5 (sd 5.06) |
FACILITATORS | Recognition of the illness |
Perceived need for treatment | |
Causal biological attribution | |
Shared clinical decision | |
BARRIERS | Belief in the lack of effective treatment |
Adverse effects | |
Social control |
Category | Quotes |
---|---|
Adverse effects | Perceived need for treatment, “(…) and I’m destroyed, two pills and I’m destroyed, “bang!”, and I’m raring to go, and I don’t know what’s going on, I said: “Christ, what is this?” (…) you get vertigo, you feel bad. Sometimes, you don’t know how to -excuse me- wipe you arise or you can’t do it, you are embarrassed, people yell at you, you don’t know why… In other words, it’s crap, as you say: “Christ!”. It’s because they sedated you and remove the ability to react violently, obviously (…)”. “(…) some are to pick you up, others are to bring you down, others put you to sleep and others wake you up (…) and, in between all that, you get fatter, you lose your libido, your cholesterol goes up”. |
Belief in the lack of effective treatment | “(…) it is very difficult for them to give us something that works”. “(…) there’s no magic bullet, not for them, not for us”. “I believe that if they knew how to fix it, they would’ve fixed it, but (…) they don’t know, the… the psychiatrists are taking stabs in the dark”. “They don’t have the tools. I don’t have the tools to come down or go up either”. |
Social control | “It’s because we live in a society and, because of that, we don’t go without medicine; if we didn’t live in society, we wouldn’t take medicine because we wouldn’t bother anyone”. “(…) they forced me to take injections… and they told me “We can’t give you more”, that’s it, I didn’t even know what I had”. |
Category | Quotes |
---|---|
Recognition of the illness | “(…) I have to take medicine for my bipolar disorder, that’s it, I have a treatment, my illness has a name”. “I lowered the dosage myself because I’ve spent years more or less understanding this illness.” “(…) an illness that restricts us, the medicine we take has many effects that go against our health and, in my case, I’m type 1, mania is the one in charge”. |
Perceived need to treatment | “There are times when I’ve gone to the doctor and I’ve told them: “Please, give me something, I can’t do this on my own” and then they give me something, still at risk. Now I have an anti-depressant and I’m somewhat ok and if they say they’re going to take me off it (…) I’ll tell them not to”. “(…) if you don’t have good medicine (…)”. “(…) you have to undergo treatment, if you don’t (…)”. |
Causal biological attribution | “Of course I believe that the medicine has millions of benefits…what I want to say is that medicine is indispensable. They couldn’t take the medicine away from me. Because bipolarity has been studied…what happens in the brain is the movement of amounts of lithium. Therefore, lithium goes up and down”. “My mother also has a kind of disorder, like…she has depression, she has fibromyalgia and she has plenty of pills”. “With medicine, I’m ok for now, I also have rapid cycles”. |
Shared clinical decision | “(…) the patient could also decide”. “Being sick doesn’t mean we can’t make decisions (…) but, as they think we’re crazy, they don’t let you make any decision”. |
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Alcalá, J.Á.; Fontalba-Navas, A.; Company-Morales, M.; Romero-Guillena, S.L.; Gutiérrez-Higueras, T.; Gutiérrez-Rojas, L. Facilitators and Barriers of Medication Adherence Based on Beliefs of Persons with Bipolar Disorder: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137633
Alcalá JÁ, Fontalba-Navas A, Company-Morales M, Romero-Guillena SL, Gutiérrez-Higueras T, Gutiérrez-Rojas L. Facilitators and Barriers of Medication Adherence Based on Beliefs of Persons with Bipolar Disorder: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137633
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlcalá, Jose Ángel, Andrés Fontalba-Navas, Miguel Company-Morales, Samuel L. Romero-Guillena, Teófilo Gutiérrez-Higueras, and Luis Gutiérrez-Rojas. 2022. "Facilitators and Barriers of Medication Adherence Based on Beliefs of Persons with Bipolar Disorder: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137633
APA StyleAlcalá, J. Á., Fontalba-Navas, A., Company-Morales, M., Romero-Guillena, S. L., Gutiérrez-Higueras, T., & Gutiérrez-Rojas, L. (2022). Facilitators and Barriers of Medication Adherence Based on Beliefs of Persons with Bipolar Disorder: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(13), 7633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137633