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Minorities with lupus nephritis and medications: a study of facilitators to medication decision-making. | LitMetric

Minorities with lupus nephritis and medications: a study of facilitators to medication decision-making.

Arthritis Res Ther

Department of Health Services Administration at School of Health Professions, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1705 University Blvd, Birmingham, AL, 35233, USA.

Published: December 2015

Background: Medication decision-making poses a challenge for a significant proportion of patients. This is an even more challenging for patients who have complex, rare, immune conditions that affect them at a young age and are associated with the use of life-long treatment, perceived by some as having significant risk of side effects and toxicity.

Introduction: The aim of our study was to examine the perspectives of women with lupus nephritis on facilitators to medication decision-making.

Methods: We used the nominal group technique (NGT), a structured formative process to elicit patient perspectives. An NGT expert moderated eight patient group meetings. Participants (n = 52) responded to the question "What sorts of things make it easier for people to decide to take the medicines that doctors prescribe for treating their lupus kidney disease?" Patients nominated, discussed, and prioritized facilitators to medication decisional processes.

Results: Fifty-two women with lupus nephritis participated in eight NGT meetings (27 African-American, 13 Hispanic, and 12 Caucasian). Average age was 40.6 years (standard deviation (SD) = 13.3), and disease duration was 11.8 years (SD = 8.3); 36.5 % obtained at least a college education, and 55.8 % had difficulty in reading health materials. Patients generated 280 decision-making facilitators (range of 26 to 42 per panel). Of these, 102 (36 %) facilitators were perceived by patients as having relatively more influence in decision-making processes than others. Prioritized facilitators included effective patient-physician communication regarding benefits/harms, patient desire to live a normal life and improve quality of life, concern for their dependents, experiencing benefits and few/infrequent/no harms with lupus medications, and their affordability. Relative to African-Americans, Caucasian and Hispanic patients endorsed a smaller percentage of facilitators as influential. Level of agreement with which patients within panels independently agreed in their selections of the three most influential facilitators ranged from 33 % to 60 %.

Conclusions: We identified facilitators to lupus medication decision-making. This information will be used to populate a decision aid for lupus nephritis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4704543PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13075-015-0883-zDOI Listing

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