Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis

Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate beliefs about use of medications for a sample of Iraqi psoriasis patients, and to examine the association between these beliefs and selected patient’s related factors. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 300 patients with diagnosed psoriasis. Part...

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Main Authors: Sarah Haider, Dheyaa J Kadhim, Sarmad A. Abdul Razzak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2021-01-01
Series:INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/3584
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spelling doaj-35d18158e4c847d0b607e06490dc887e2021-01-29T16:44:30ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingINNOVATIONS in Pharmacy2155-04172021-01-0112110.24926/iip.v12i1.3584Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with PsoriasisSarah Haider0Dheyaa J Kadhim1Sarmad A. Abdul Razzak2Ministry of Health and Environment, Baghdad, IraqUniversity of BaghdadCenter of Dermatology and Venereology, Baghdad, Iraq Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate beliefs about use of medications for a sample of Iraqi psoriasis patients, and to examine the association between these beliefs and selected patient’s related factors. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 300 patients with diagnosed psoriasis. Participants were recruited at the center of Dermatology and Venereology, Medical City in Baghdad, the capital city of Iraq. Patients’ mean age was 35.15years (±10.54). Beliefs about medicines were measured by the Arabic version of Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire. Results: Most the patients (76.7%) had strong beliefs in the need (acceptance beliefs) for their psoriasis medicines (specific-necessity score higher than specific-concern), whereas 15.0% of patients had specific-concern score higher than specific-necessity and 8.3% of patients had specific-necessity score equal to specific-concern. At the same time, 74.4% of the patients believed that the medicines disrupt their lives and (35.6%) of them had concerns about the possibility of becoming addicted on these medicines. Many other patients were worried about the long-term consequences of the medicines (58.7%). In addition, 31.0% of the participants believe that all medicines are poisoning, and that they do more harm than good. Finally, many of the participants believed that physicians prescribe too many medicines (46.7%), and they can minimize the number of prescribed medicines by spending more time with their patients (32.6%). Conclusions: Female gender and longer disease duration have direct association with specific necessity, while psoriasis severity has a direct association with specific concern. In conclusion, Beliefs about medications and habit strength are important modifiable drivers to enhance adherence and clinical outcomes in the control of psoriasis. https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/3584
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Haider
Dheyaa J Kadhim
Sarmad A. Abdul Razzak
spellingShingle Sarah Haider
Dheyaa J Kadhim
Sarmad A. Abdul Razzak
Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
author_facet Sarah Haider
Dheyaa J Kadhim
Sarmad A. Abdul Razzak
author_sort Sarah Haider
title Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
title_short Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
title_full Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
title_fullStr Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
title_full_unstemmed Beliefs about Medicines among a Sample of Iraqi Patients with Psoriasis
title_sort beliefs about medicines among a sample of iraqi patients with psoriasis
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
issn 2155-0417
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Objectives: This study aimed to evaluate beliefs about use of medications for a sample of Iraqi psoriasis patients, and to examine the association between these beliefs and selected patient’s related factors. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 300 patients with diagnosed psoriasis. Participants were recruited at the center of Dermatology and Venereology, Medical City in Baghdad, the capital city of Iraq. Patients’ mean age was 35.15years (±10.54). Beliefs about medicines were measured by the Arabic version of Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire. Results: Most the patients (76.7%) had strong beliefs in the need (acceptance beliefs) for their psoriasis medicines (specific-necessity score higher than specific-concern), whereas 15.0% of patients had specific-concern score higher than specific-necessity and 8.3% of patients had specific-necessity score equal to specific-concern. At the same time, 74.4% of the patients believed that the medicines disrupt their lives and (35.6%) of them had concerns about the possibility of becoming addicted on these medicines. Many other patients were worried about the long-term consequences of the medicines (58.7%). In addition, 31.0% of the participants believe that all medicines are poisoning, and that they do more harm than good. Finally, many of the participants believed that physicians prescribe too many medicines (46.7%), and they can minimize the number of prescribed medicines by spending more time with their patients (32.6%). Conclusions: Female gender and longer disease duration have direct association with specific necessity, while psoriasis severity has a direct association with specific concern. In conclusion, Beliefs about medications and habit strength are important modifiable drivers to enhance adherence and clinical outcomes in the control of psoriasis.
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/3584
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