The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === People with severe mental illness (SMI) often suffer from comorbid physical conditions that result in chronic morbidity and early mortality. Physical health decision-making is one area that has been largely unexplored with the SMI popula...

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Main Author: Wright-Berryman, Jennifer
Other Authors: Kim, Hea-Won
Language:en_US
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6438
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-64382019-05-10T15:21:34Z The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care Wright-Berryman, Jennifer Kim, Hea-Won Severe mental illness Integrated care Decision-making Social support Mentally ill -- Care Mental illness -- Care Mental illness -- Treatment Drugs -- Administration Mentally ill -- Drug use Patient compliance Autonomy (Psychology) Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) People with severe mental illness (SMI) often suffer from comorbid physical conditions that result in chronic morbidity and early mortality. Physical health decision-making is one area that has been largely unexplored with the SMI population. This study aimed to identify what factors contribute to the physical healthcare decision-making autonomy preferences of persons with SMI, and to identify the impact of these autonomy preferences on medication adherence. Ninety-five adults with SMI were recruited from an integrated care clinic located in a community mental health center. Fifty-six completed a three-month follow-up. Multiple linear regression for hypothesis 1 (n=95) and hierarchical regression for hypothesis 2 (n=56) were used to analyze data on personal characteristics, physical health decision-making autonomy preferences and medication adherence. For the open-ended questions, thematic analysis was used to uncover facilitators and barriers to medication adherence. With this sample, being male predicted greater desired autonomy, and having less social support predicted less desired autonomy. When background characteristics were held constant, autonomy preferences and perceived autonomy support from the physician only contributed an additional 1% of the variance in medication adherence. Lastly, participants reported behavioral factors and having family/personal support to take medications as facilitators to medication adherence for physical health care, while citing financial and other resource limitations as barriers. 2015-05-21T18:51:48Z 2015-05-21T18:51:48Z 2014-10 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6438 en_US CC0 1.0 Universal http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Severe mental illness
Integrated care
Decision-making
Social support
Mentally ill -- Care
Mental illness -- Care
Mental illness -- Treatment
Drugs -- Administration
Mentally ill -- Drug use
Patient compliance
Autonomy (Psychology)
spellingShingle Severe mental illness
Integrated care
Decision-making
Social support
Mentally ill -- Care
Mental illness -- Care
Mental illness -- Treatment
Drugs -- Administration
Mentally ill -- Drug use
Patient compliance
Autonomy (Psychology)
Wright-Berryman, Jennifer
The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === People with severe mental illness (SMI) often suffer from comorbid physical conditions that result in chronic morbidity and early mortality. Physical health decision-making is one area that has been largely unexplored with the SMI population. This study aimed to identify what factors contribute to the physical healthcare decision-making autonomy preferences of persons with SMI, and to identify the impact of these autonomy preferences on medication adherence. Ninety-five adults with SMI were recruited from an integrated care clinic located in a community mental health center. Fifty-six completed a three-month follow-up. Multiple linear regression for hypothesis 1 (n=95) and hierarchical regression for hypothesis 2 (n=56) were used to analyze data on personal characteristics, physical health decision-making autonomy preferences and medication adherence. For the open-ended questions, thematic analysis was used to uncover facilitators and barriers to medication adherence. With this sample, being male predicted greater desired autonomy, and having less social support predicted less desired autonomy. When background characteristics were held constant, autonomy preferences and perceived autonomy support from the physician only contributed an additional 1% of the variance in medication adherence. Lastly, participants reported behavioral factors and having family/personal support to take medications as facilitators to medication adherence for physical health care, while citing financial and other resource limitations as barriers.
author2 Kim, Hea-Won
author_facet Kim, Hea-Won
Wright-Berryman, Jennifer
author Wright-Berryman, Jennifer
author_sort Wright-Berryman, Jennifer
title The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
title_short The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
title_full The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
title_fullStr The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
title_full_unstemmed The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
title_sort influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/6438
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