RESUMO
Poster abstracts are evaluated based on the following criteria: significance of the problem to healthy aging or medication management; innovativeness of ideas, methods, and/or approach; methodological rigor of methods and approach; presentation of finding; implications identified for future research, practice, and/or policy; and clarity of writing. Submissions are not evaluated through the peer-reviewed process used by The Consultant Pharmacist. Industry support is indicated, where applicable. Presenting author is in italics. The poster abstract presentation is supported by the ASCP Foundation.
RESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Medication-related problems remain one of the largest health risks for older adults, yet there are few resources available to effectively reduce medication-related problems for community dwelling older adults. The aim of this pilot program was to determine the effectiveness of a multifaceted medication intervention on medication adherence and self-efficacy in medication use. DESIGN: A single sample, pre-post-test design. SETTING: This pilot study was conducted at Independence at Home, a Senior Care Action Network (SCAN) community service in Southern California. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred and eighty community-dwelling, diverse older adults with potential medication-related problems and their caregivers. INTERVENTION: The Community Medication Education, Data, & Safety (C-MEDS) Program identified community-dwelling older adults with potential medication-related problems and provided in-depth personalized medication safety, management and support, based on an in-home assessment and interventions delivered by trained geriatrics experts including pharmacists, nurses, a community health worker, and a pharmacy technician. MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcomes included medication use self-efficacy, measured by the MUSE, and select medication adherence measures. Adherence was measured via pill count and via the MedAdhIR tool, a scale that measures risk for medication non-adherence. RESULTS: Following participation in the C-MEDS program, community-dwelling older adult C-MEDS graduates (n = 105) had higher self-efficacy in managing medications (P < .001). Additionally, C-MEDS graduates also exhibited increased adherence to three types of medications (statins, diabetes-related, and certain hypertension drugs; P < .001). Moreover, risk of non-adherence declined significantly following C-MEDS graduation (P < .001). CONCLUSION: C-MEDS holds promise as an effective intervention among community-dwelling older adults in improving medication self-efficacy, medication adherence among select medications, and reducing risk for non-adherence. Additional studies are needed to assess replicability and impact on clinical outcomes.
Assuntos
Serviços de Saúde Comunitária/organização & administração , Educação em Saúde/organização & administração , Adesão à Medicação , Autoeficácia , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , California , Feminino , Geriatria , Humanos , Vida Independente , Masculino , Multimorbidade , Projetos PilotoRESUMO
OBJECTIVES: Barriers to treatment for depression and anxiety are prevalent among older adults and caregivers living in the community. We designed and implemented an evidence-based psychotherapy program to reduce obstacles to care. DESIGN: A practice improvement initiative providing no-fee evidence-based mental health care at home in clients' primary languages. SETTING: Independence at Home, a community service of SCAN Health Plan in Southern California. PARTICIPANTS: Diverse older adults and adult caregivers of older people with age-related disability (mainly dementia). INTERVENTION: Redesign of an existing supportive counseling program to improve access to validated models of psychotherapy for depression and anxiety. MEASUREMENTS: We describe program content, phases of development, equity in participation from referral to program completion, clinical outcomes, and estimated direct program delivery costs. RESULTS: Insights successfully served demographically diverse clients experiencing a broad range of barriers to mental health care. A total of 211 clients completed therapy using one of three evidence-based approaches in the first 33 months of operation (2015-2018). Clinical efficacy was high and equivalent across demographic groups and therapy models. Depression, anxiety, quality of life, self-rated disability, and patient activation all improved significantly. We supported therapists' transition to the new model, modified workflows, and used clinical outcome data and therapist focus groups to improve referral, selection, and enrollment processes and simplify treatment assignment. With program maturation, treatment duration and direct costs both declined. CONCLUSION: The Insights model could add value to healthcare organizations seeking to provide effective, equitable mental health services for older adults and caregivers who have difficulty accessing care for depression, anxiety, or difficult life challenges. J Am Geriatr Soc 67:2174-2179, 2019.