A Qualitative Application of Temporal Self-Regulation Theory to Understand Adherence to Simple and Complex Medication Regimens
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Current Study
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Interview Schedule
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Quality Procedures
3. Findings
3.1. Participants
3.2. Themes
3.2.1. Routines
Yeah just because I take it in the morning, so then like it’s easy just to take two at the same time.(Participant 22, p. 4)
So when I added my, when I used to take the (medication) in the morning, that was the easiest, just to remember to take them both together. But now the other one is at night. So yes more, a bit more inclined to forget at night-time.(Participant 26, p. 4)
Planning
…having to find the time to go into the chemist, remembering to refill your scripts … I usually try to have everything ready (prescriptions refilled) when I have, you know, maybe four days left.(Participant 23, p. 5)
…when I used to go out and be a party animal. I’d generally take it before I go…(Participant 5, p. 7)
Cues
…and then the glass of water is there. It’s like, just take my tablets with that. So it’s sort of, the water is there to remind me I haven’t had them yet(Participant 14, p. 4)
… it also has a flavour, so it’s kind of like a tutti-frutti flavour. Whereas before I used to go to sleep with the taste of mint in my mouth from brushing my teeth. Now I have this sweet flavour in my mouth. So, if I lie down, I’m like ‘okay, time to go to sleep’, I’m like ‘oh, my mouth tastes normal’, go to the kitchen, and get it (medication)(Participant 22, p. 6)
…it probably helped me like not forget it as much. Because when I was just taking (medication), you know it was probably the one medication I didn’t have to have at a specific time. So I was just a little bit more ‘meh’ about it. So I guess now I don’t forget it as often.(Participant 17, p. 6)
Lifestyle Factors
…sometimes I’m like ‘oh, I’ll stay at yours tonight” when I’m already out, and it (medication) has to be refrigerated because it like melts. So like, it dissolves in your mouth, but it also dissolves if there’s too much humidity or if it gets too hot. So I’m like, it’s a bit of a trek.(Participant 22, p. 7)
I think in the morning I do have a routine, especially when uni is on or whenever I have study to do. I would wake up you know get breakfast and go take the pill.(Participant 26, p. 4)
3.2.2. External Supports
My family are very different; they’ve been very supportive with my diabetes. They don’t really understand the academia side of things but my friends understand the academia and not so much the diabetes side and then my partner is a bit of both. So it’s kind of like I just get different support from different networks and it kind of sort of marries out.(Participant 27, p. 9)
Professional Support
…and the bulk billing doctor I saw, she was really helpful. Told me all these things I didn’t even know.(Participant 19, p. 5)
So yeah I’m pretty open to talking to my doctor about anything you know that could be wrong. Like side-effects and that kind of stuff(Participant 2, p. 6)
Social Support
So classic mum drills it in. She’s like ‘You’ve got to take it, you know you’ll get sick and this and that will happen’. So she’s definitely supportive of it…(Participant 20, p. 4)
Mum has always encouraged it because she has been iron deficient since she was a little kid and yeah she knows the facts of it. And she’s always like “Go and get your blood tested for your iron levels” but she’s always just been conscious of it.(Participant 6, p. 4)
…I guess he (partner) just didn’t really know (about taking the antidepressant)…Well he knew but like he didn’t think about it or anything but until I said a couple of months ago about, ‘Can you help me remember because I’m forgetting? And it’s important that I take it’.(Participant 18, p. 8)
Stigma
Mum wasn’t too sure of the pill (contraceptive pill). Yeah, she obviously thought about the other connotations of me taking the pill and then got a bit upset…(Participant 26, p. 6)
…my parents would be like annoying if any small issue arises, they’d be like ‘have you taken it?’. As if like, ‘you’re acting irrational, have you taken it?’. Which like obviously wasn’t…like I had (taken the medication) so that was kind of like annoying(Participant 18, p. 5)
I was like I don’t need to take that…And I was like no, people who take this are really sick and that’s not me. And he was like okay sure, here’s a script, think about it.(Participant 7, p. 1)
3.2.3. Cost
So this way (purchasing the generic brand medication) I can sort of like go and like it doesn’t make me want to be like ‘Oh, I’ll have to go pay for it’…At least this way it’s like easier to stick to and stuff. Like it’s cheaper, it’s easier all that kind of stuff yeah.(Participant 2, p. 7)
…it costs $60 in total. It is a bit pricey in my opinion, you know just to cough up $60 I think it’s every 30 days…I don’t think it would stop me so I am lucky at the moment that mum will help me if I need it to like, she’ll lend me some money to go buy it...(Participant 20, p. 5)
Because there’s so many (medications) and constantly going to the get scripts and the money of that is huge because I don’t have a healthcare card…I hate it but it’s kind of like, I mean the cold sores (medication) is definitely worth it, nobody else in the family has them and I do not want to pass that onto my children.(Participant 23, p. 4)
I was on another one and I went to the doctor and said I’m not fussed about paying the extra money, I would like to go back on (contraceptive pill type) because I prefer that it’s shortened my periods…(Participant 24, p. 2)
3.2.4. Sense of Agency
I take them with a glass of water because if I don’t it does make my stomach quite sore, makes me feel quite ill … so I do have to have a lot of liquid and I always eat with them…(Participant 10, p. 4)
…it works for twelve hours and it’s a stimulant, so obviously I take (sleep medication) because I can’t sleep so I’ve got to be really careful when I take the (stimulant-type medication) in the mornings. I don’t take it past like nine AM.(Participant 22, p. 4)
…I get really bad headaches. And one doctor basically said that ‘Oh take this medication’. He didn’t really tell me what it was or what it was for. But I went home, had a Google, read up, and it was like basically epilepsy medication … that’s a bit of a big medication just to throw out there and tell me to take. Because that’s going to alter a lot of things. So yeah I take doctor’s advice with a high grain of salt.(Participant 6, p. 7)
Choice
I know a while back he kind of started thinking about taking me off it (medication). But then like I said, sometimes I space out a bit so I thought I’d prefer to just stick to it for like the foreseeable future anyway.(Participant 3, p. 6)
3.2.5. Adverse Outcomes
Symptoms of the Health Condition
…I kind of get worried that I’m going to get sick or something and if that gets onto my chest, I won’t perform as well in this test or in this (sporting) competition…(Participant 20, p. 8)
…if I miss a day or two like that, the pain (period pain) doesn’t come straight away which is good. But I do get like bleeding and stuff which is irritating and makes me want to be more regular with it.”(Participant 2, p. 8)
Side-Effects
…the main side effect of (medication) is dryness everything and I’ve already got quite a few issues with blood noses…when I get sick I can burst blood vessels quite easily in my nose and those will, I’ll have quite a few blood noses…so I got sick and I just kept getting little blood noses and I thought what was it and then I realised it was (medication) that was causing it (the sore) to not heal properly.(Participant 24, p. 4)
I would wake up in the mornings and just feel like I couldn’t do anything and that I needed to sleep. But I pushed through that(Participant 16, p. 1)
…it’s (the sore) like a small cut in my nose that’s not going away. That’s why I’m not taking it.(Participant 24, p. 5)
…I mean with the pill you might get your period and like spotting and you might get pregnant which is also scary…I’ve always been very, very, very careful (taking the medication)…it’s if you forget one or two you’re not protected, end of story.(Participant 5, p. 2)
3.2.6. Weighing Up Pros and Cons
…okay I might not actually be about to die. So I’ll keep going and then it (muscle spasm side-effect of medication) went away after about three weeks. And then after that I was like ‘yeah super worth that initial rough period.(Participant 1, p. 2)
…the whole nausea aspect of it, and I just don’t know like taking something that I could not take, like putting chemicals into my body that I don’t necessarily need to. Like I don’t love that, but I think the benefits outweigh the negatives.”(Participant 4, p. 4)
It tastes disgusting, that’s probably the only thing I hate but that would never deter me from taking it because that’s how happy I am with taking it and the results that it provides me with.(Participant 11, p. 10)
…without it I probably wouldn’t be able to function too well. I’d be able to function but my mood would be up and down. You know quite unhappy. Easy to rile up you know, get angry, and just the way I would respond and things like that. So, for me, it was I knew I had to do it…(Participant 8, p. 4)
4. Discussion
4.1. Temporal Self-Regulation Theory
4.2. Simple vs. More Complex Regimens
4.3. Non Temporal Self-Regulation Theory Variables
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theme | Subthemes | Description |
---|---|---|
Routines | Maintaining medication regimens in a consistent and routinised way | |
• Planning | Putting plans in place to ensure preparedness | |
• Cues | Use of prompts and reminders to ensure adherence | |
• Lifestyle Factors | Lifestyle barriers and facilitators of adherence | |
External Supports | The influence of different support systems in participants’ adherence | |
• Professional Support | Support from trusted health professionals | |
• Social Support | Support from loved ones | |
• Stigma | Prejudice and judgement from those around them | |
Cost | The different role of medication cost in adhering to regimen | |
Sense of Agency | Having a responsibility to understand and be knowledgeable about regimen | |
• Choice | Making choices related to own medication and regimen | |
Adverse Outcomes | Experiences of negative bodily outcomes related to taking medication or lack thereof | |
• Symptoms of the health condition | The influence of symptoms on adherence | |
• Side-effects | Negative side effects from taking medication or missing medication | |
Weight up Pros and Cons | The process of considering the positives and negatives of the medication regimen |
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Liddelow, C.; Mullan, B.; Boyes, M.; McBride, H. A Qualitative Application of Temporal Self-Regulation Theory to Understand Adherence to Simple and Complex Medication Regimens. Healthcare 2020, 8, 487. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040487
Liddelow C, Mullan B, Boyes M, McBride H. A Qualitative Application of Temporal Self-Regulation Theory to Understand Adherence to Simple and Complex Medication Regimens. Healthcare. 2020; 8(4):487. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040487
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiddelow, Caitlin, Barbara Mullan, Mark Boyes, and Hannah McBride. 2020. "A Qualitative Application of Temporal Self-Regulation Theory to Understand Adherence to Simple and Complex Medication Regimens" Healthcare 8, no. 4: 487. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040487
APA StyleLiddelow, C., Mullan, B., Boyes, M., & McBride, H. (2020). A Qualitative Application of Temporal Self-Regulation Theory to Understand Adherence to Simple and Complex Medication Regimens. Healthcare, 8(4), 487. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040487