Objective Assessment of Adherence and Inhaler Technique among Asthma and COPD Patients in London: A Study in Community Pharmacies Using an Electronic Monitoring Device
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Phase One: Service Evaluation
2.1.1. Outcome Measures and Calculations
2.1.2. Data Analysis
2.2. Phase Two: Semi-Structured Interviews Regarding Perceptions and Acceptability of the INCATM Device among Patients (the Qualitative Phase)
2.2.1. Data Collection
2.2.2. Interview Topic Guide
2.2.3. Data Analysis
2.3. Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. Service Evaluation
3.1.1. Study Population and Demographics
3.1.2. Level of Adherence among Patients before and after the MUR Type Consultation with the CP
3.1.3. Level of Inhaler Technique among Patients before and after the Discussion (Service Evaluation) as Determined by the INCATM Device
3.1.4. Feedback Questionnaire Data
3.2. Semi-Structured Interviews
3.2.1. Acceptability of the INCATM Technology
“Yes, because although I know how to change the technique now, I want to be 100% sure I am getting it right next time”.(Patient 6)
“If there is a way that the device tells you whether you are doing it right or wrong when you are taking it, like a green colour if used correctly or red colour when used wrongly”.(Patient 9)
“Well I would suggest it to them (referring to other patients) because I was thinking I was doing everything correctly when I wasn’t so may be it would be helpful for them to learn if they are doing it correctly or not”.(Patient 18)
“I just hope that this could be rolled out to many more asthma patients…I can be a live testament”.(Patient 12)
“Absolutely, absolutely yes, because I am surprised that I am not using the inhaler properly…. and if I come at that the reverse angle is to say what harm can you do for somebody to check for a short period if their technique is okay”(Patient 16)
3.2.2. Patients’ Misperceptions about Their Inhaler Usage
“I thought I was using that inhaler properly (the patient laughs calmly) but I was not obviously… I am just shocked that I haven’t used it properly not even once…. I mean how many years I have been taking this now. 10 years”.(Patient 7)
“…this one (referring to graph related to IT) is actually more shocking because it is actually telling me that I am using it incorrectly”.(Patient 8)
3.2.3. Acceptability of the Personalised INCATM Feedback
“…it (referring to the feedback) gives me an insight of what I have been doing wrong, I should be able to correct it…”.(Patient 4)
“…I was missing doses and not taking twice a day like regularly, up till now I was just using it when I needed it, you know, which was obviously wrong ……It (referring to the feedback) certainly told me. I mean this one the usage technique (referring to the graph) it seems to come up odd and messy for me, you know, it is all messy, I can see what you mean, it is three times there, twice, twice and then odd times…”.(Patient 9)
“… I was doing wrong and now I know exactly when to take it. I am going to put an alarm on my phone and then I can take it in the correct times. Hopefully it will be much better for my condition”.(Patient 17)
“To prevent future symptoms, it made me more aware that I have to use it correctly now morning and evening”.(Patient 11)
“Yea. so I knew something wasn’t quite right especially coming with your question about the pharmacist because he mentioned this before, this doesn’t look right, overusing salbutamol but we didn’t really know what it was until you have a chart like this and put it in front of me and now it makes a lot of sense…. without this, literally the graph we are looking at it (the usage technique graph) now I don’t think we ever would have linked up, because what’s really interesting, now I am going in my mind thinking ahead so next month I have my annual check in a respiratory unit so there plus I did the pulmonary rehabilitation program ….but in both of those contexts they ask us to bring the inhalers and show how we use them, technique, so I am doing it in front of a professional so none of us have picked up on is what this picked up on, actually I am not quite clicking it till the end before I inhale, so none of the professionals or I picked up that this was happening so we would have gone for years thinking it was appropriately taken…”.(Patient 16)
“I love the NHS so I am conscious of cost…..if I am not using this properly (referring to the preventer) and I am offsetting the use of medication with another medication (referring here to the reliever) because this (pointing to the preventer) isn’t working so I am not only having the issue of not using the inhaler properly, then I am overusing another medication (the reliever) unnecessarily, so now we have two issues, one not being used properly and one being used improperly…”.(Patient 16)
“…what’s the relationship like between the patient and the person delivering the message…… that’s why the graph works as well because if the relationship wasn’t good the graph is outside of that…”.(Patient 16)
“It (referring to the graphs) is just easier to read”.(Patient 18)
“…it makes it very clear that I am using it incorrectly, I think it is very very useful so it, you know, allows me immediately to see a visual, visual sort of information, allow you to sort of understand immediately where you need to get better, so I am happy with it”.(Patient 6)
“Yes very easy… because green and orange, the colours are telling me”.(Patient 2)
3.2.4. Positive Perceptions about the Tailored Consultations
“I learned that I wasn’t inhaling hard enough, I was not getting, I was putting my mouth too far over the rim instead of just of over the mouthpiece”.(Patient 18)
“I thought I was doing it right but obviously I wasn’t but I mean this pharmacist here he has been so good to me, he always looked after me well and he has pointed out what to do so I have no concern, it is just my own fault I was not doing it right”.(Patient 7)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Frequency (%) | Median (IQR) |
---|---|---|
Age (y) | 64.5 (20.3) | |
Gender, n (%) | ||
Female | 10 (56) | |
Male | 8 (44) | |
Respiratory condition | ||
Asthma | 6 (33%) | |
COPD | 12 (67%) | |
Smoking history | ||
Non-smoker | 5 (28) | |
Current smoker | 5 (28) | |
Ex-smoker | 8 (44) | |
Education Level | ||
Primary | 1 (6) | |
Secondary | 7 (39) | |
College | 6 (33) | |
Undergraduate | 2 (11) | |
Postgraduate | 2 (11) | |
Marital status | ||
Single | 5 (28) | |
Married | 8 (44) | |
Divorced | 1 (6) | |
Widow/Widower | 4 (22) | |
Residential area | ||
Kingston Upon Thames | 2 (11) | |
Richmond Upon Thames | 6 (33) | |
Wandsworth | 1 (6) | |
Merton | 6 (33) | |
Sutton | 3 (17) | |
Flu vaccination | ||
Yes | 17 (78) | |
No | 4 (22) | |
Pneumococcal vaccination | ||
Yes | 7 (39) | |
No | 11 (61) | |
Presence of comorbidities | ||
Yes | 15 (83) | |
No | 3 (17) | |
No. of comorbid conditions | 2 (1) | |
No. of medications per month | 10 (7) | |
No. of GP visits per year due to COPD or asthma | 2.5 (3) | |
Exacerbations due to COPD or asthma during the last year | ||
Yes | 10 (56) | |
No | 8 (44) | |
No. of exacerbations due to COPD or asthma during the last year | 2.5 (3) | |
No. of exacerbations due to COPD during the last year | 0.5 (2) | |
No. of exacerbations due to asthma during the last year | 2 (3) | |
A & E visits due to COPD or asthma during the last year | ||
Yes | 1 (6) | |
No | 17 (94) | |
No. of A & E visits due to COPD or asthma during the last year | 3 (0) | |
Hospital admissions due to COPD or asthma during the last year | 3 (17) | |
No | 15 (83) | |
No. of hospital admissions due to COPD or asthma during the last year | 1 (0) |
Number of Audio Files (before) | Number of Audio Files (after) | p Value | |
---|---|---|---|
Expected doses | 1080 | 1080 | / |
Attempted doses for >30 days, electronic doses with evidence of priming | 999 | 1077 | 0.628 |
Attempted doses for 30 days, electronic doses with evidence of priming | 830 | 907 | 0.421 |
Actual doses for 30 days, accounting for missed doses, and incorrect technique | 396 | 726 | 0.002 ** |
INCATM Adherence Measures | Patients Having ≥ 80% Adherence before, n (%) | Patients Having ≥ 80% Adherence after, n (%) |
---|---|---|
INCATM attempted adherence | 4 (22) | 10 (56) |
INCATM actual adherence | 0 (0) | 4 (22) |
Audio Error | Number (%) of Audio Files before (n = 434) | Number (%) of Audio Files after (n = 181) | p Value |
---|---|---|---|
Errors in drug priming/drug blistering | |||
No drug priming, inhalation detected | 75 (17.3%) | 45 (24.9%) | 0.268 |
Multiple drug priming | 6 (1.4%) | 4 (2.2%) | 0.480 |
Multiple drug priming and multiple inhalation | 3 (0.7%) | 2 (1.1%) | 0.705 |
Dose dumping | 0 | 0 | |
Total | 84 | 51 | |
Errors in inhalation | |||
Exhales into the inhaler after drug priming and before inhalation | 10 (2.3%) | 3 (1.6%) | 0.336 |
Drug priming present, no subsequent inhalation detected | 124 (28.6%) | 43 (23.8%) | 0.277 |
Multiple inhalations | 216 (49.7%) | 84 (46.4%) | 0.009 ** |
Total | 350 | 130 |
TER | Number of Patients Before (Percentage) | Number of Patients after (Percentage) |
---|---|---|
TER < 20% | 4 (22) | 12 (67) |
TER ≥ 20% | 14 (78) | 6 (33) |
Total | 18 (100) | 18 (100) |
Themes | Subthemes |
---|---|
Theme 1: Acceptability of the INCATM technology | Subtheme 1: Patients’ positive perceptions about the INCATM technology. Subtheme 2: Recommendation of the INCATM device to other patients. |
Theme 2: Patients’ misperceptions about their inhaler usage | None |
Theme 3: Acceptability of the personalised INCATM feedback | Subtheme 1: Perceived usefulness of the INCATM feedback. Subtheme 2: Perceived ease of understanding of the INCATM feedback. |
Theme 4: Positive perceptions about the tailored consultations | None |
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Hesso, I.; Nabhani-Gebara, S.; Kayyali, R. Objective Assessment of Adherence and Inhaler Technique among Asthma and COPD Patients in London: A Study in Community Pharmacies Using an Electronic Monitoring Device. Pharmacy 2023, 11, 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11030094
Hesso I, Nabhani-Gebara S, Kayyali R. Objective Assessment of Adherence and Inhaler Technique among Asthma and COPD Patients in London: A Study in Community Pharmacies Using an Electronic Monitoring Device. Pharmacy. 2023; 11(3):94. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11030094
Chicago/Turabian StyleHesso, Iman, Shereen Nabhani-Gebara, and Reem Kayyali. 2023. "Objective Assessment of Adherence and Inhaler Technique among Asthma and COPD Patients in London: A Study in Community Pharmacies Using an Electronic Monitoring Device" Pharmacy 11, no. 3: 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11030094
APA StyleHesso, I., Nabhani-Gebara, S., & Kayyali, R. (2023). Objective Assessment of Adherence and Inhaler Technique among Asthma and COPD Patients in London: A Study in Community Pharmacies Using an Electronic Monitoring Device. Pharmacy, 11(3), 94. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy11030094