Pediatric asthma: a look at adherence from the patient and family perspective.

Curr Allergy Asthma Rep

Developmental and Behavioral Sciences, Children's Mercy Hospital, 2401 Gillham Road, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA.

Published: November 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • Despite significant research efforts, there has been little success in reducing nonadherence to asthma treatment in children, indicating a need for a new approach.
  • Families have increasingly been involved in treatment plans, but a genuinely patient-centered approach remains insufficient in promoting everyday adherence.
  • Patients often make intentional choices about their treatment, experimenting with their regimen, and understanding these decision-making processes could help healthcare providers support better adherence and improve health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Although extensive research has been done in an effort to understand and promote adherence in pediatric asthma, little progress has been made in reducing the prevalence of nonadherence. Some researchers argue that a paradigm shift is necessary to advance the adherence field. Despite the recent trend for increasing the role of families in determining treatment plans, a patient-centered approach has been lacking in adherence to a daily regimen. It is clear that, although patients and families show evidence of inadvertent nonadherence (eg, forgetfulness), they also engage in volitional or intentional nonadherence, via reasoned and purposeful decisions. Patients conduct "experiments" with their regimen components in an effort to balance the burden of disease with the burden of treatment. These experiments typically involve some degree of nonadherence. Perhaps, if researchers strive to better understand the decision-making process involved in these experiments, health care providers can guide families in making adherence decisions that would lead to attainment of treatment goals, improvement in quality of life, and realization of positive clinical outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11882-004-0007-3DOI Listing

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