The Subjective Experience of Using Medications: What We Know and the Paths Forward
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Development
2.1. Changes in the Physical and Phenomenal Body
2.1.1. Medications and Life: Intrusion or Normalization?
2.1.2. What Is a Medication? The Various Symbols That Permeate a Scientific and Technological Product
2.2. Experience Related to the Use of Medications over Time
2.3. The Experience of the Other
2.4. Patient Rationality in Decision-Making about Pharmacotherapy: Discussions about Sexuality and Freedom
3. Final Considerations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ways of Experiencing the Use of Medicines | Elements Linked to These Experiences |
---|---|
Resolution | Interruption of the evolution of the disease |
Prevention of harm | |
Reduction of symptoms | |
Improvement of clinical parameters (predictability) | |
Normalization of life | |
Adversity | Occurrence of adverse drug reactions and the fear of adverse reactions |
Difficulties inherent to the use of the drug | |
Difficulty in achieving the goal of therapy | |
Fear of stigma and discrimination | |
Fear of dependence | |
Fear of a lack of effectiveness and waiting time for effectiveness | |
Fear of changes in life projects | |
Symbol of trouble, that something is not right | |
Feeling of incoherence between the markers of the disease and the perception of their health and well-being | |
Ambiguity | Finding a balance between acknowledging there is a need for the drug and the fear of taking it |
Requirement of the acquisition of new habits | |
Irrelevance | There is no change in the phenomenal/lived body caused by the disease or the medications |
Aspects of the Medication Experience | Related Questions |
---|---|
Ways of experiencing | How have your patients been experiencing the daily use of medications? |
Are there different ways to experience this at the same time in life, depending on the disease and the drug in question? | |
How can you use this knowledge to implement/provide a more patient-centered service? | |
Habits and routines | What is the impact of habits and routines on how your patients experience the daily use of medications? |
How can you identify individuals who are overwhelmed by the burden of adhering to complicated treatment routines? | |
How can you provide the conditions to integrate drugs into your patient’s daily life and help to harmonize individuals and their treatment? | |
Temporal aspects | Do you recognize that your patient’s experience can vary with time? |
How can you use the knowledge about body memory and cyclical temporal variation to build a more patient-centered practice? | |
The role of the healthcare professional | How can health professionals minimize the experiences of ambiguity and adversity in clinical practice? |
How can health professionals foster positive medication experiences, such as resolution? | |
Existential feelings | How do existential feelings impact the experience of the daily use of medication? |
Is there some way that existential feelings can be modified in the clinical context with the aim of improving the experience of patients and their health outcomes? |
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de Almeida Nascimento, Y.; Ramalho-de-Oliveira, D. The Subjective Experience of Using Medications: What We Know and the Paths Forward. Pharmacy 2021, 9, 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9010050
de Almeida Nascimento Y, Ramalho-de-Oliveira D. The Subjective Experience of Using Medications: What We Know and the Paths Forward. Pharmacy. 2021; 9(1):50. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9010050
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Almeida Nascimento, Yone, and Djenane Ramalho-de-Oliveira. 2021. "The Subjective Experience of Using Medications: What We Know and the Paths Forward" Pharmacy 9, no. 1: 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9010050
APA Stylede Almeida Nascimento, Y., & Ramalho-de-Oliveira, D. (2021). The Subjective Experience of Using Medications: What We Know and the Paths Forward. Pharmacy, 9(1), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy9010050