2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2020.06.021
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Chronic medicine users’ self-managing medication with information - A typology of patients with self-determined, security-seeking and dependent behaviors

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, some patients may not engage with community pharmacy due to their way of managing medicines. A typology of patient self‐management of medicines for chronic conditions found that patients may be ‘Self‐determined and highly self‐managing’, seeking information from multiple sources, ‘Security‐seeking and self‐managing’ enhancing knowledge already received from health professionals, ‘Dependent with limited self‐managing’ relying more on discussions with health professionals, or ‘Co‐managing with close family’ where the family member is a source of information 23 . Our findings indicated that some patients could have combinations of such types, for example, comanaging with close family while also being self‐determined to self‐manage, and using resources such as the toolkit, and having discussions with health care professionals.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, some patients may not engage with community pharmacy due to their way of managing medicines. A typology of patient self‐management of medicines for chronic conditions found that patients may be ‘Self‐determined and highly self‐managing’, seeking information from multiple sources, ‘Security‐seeking and self‐managing’ enhancing knowledge already received from health professionals, ‘Dependent with limited self‐managing’ relying more on discussions with health professionals, or ‘Co‐managing with close family’ where the family member is a source of information 23 . Our findings indicated that some patients could have combinations of such types, for example, comanaging with close family while also being self‐determined to self‐manage, and using resources such as the toolkit, and having discussions with health care professionals.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The chiropractic profession should develop transparent patient safety reporting information systems, with interdisciplinary input from healthcare personnel, clinical leaders, policymakers, informaticians, implementation scientists, patients, and resource-challenged communities within high, middle, and low-income countries. Standard vocabularies and common data models should build on foundational work in chiropractic [33] and other healthcare domains [34][35][36] given the cross-cutting nature of patient safety reporting systems.…”
Section: Call To Actionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To support attainment of each workshop's learning objectives, the team drew from resources related to deprescribing, shared decision making and medication management. 18,[21][22][23][24][25][26][27] The team also created worksheets for interactive learning activities, homework assignments between workshops, a video illustrating a shared decision-making conversation between a patient and health care provider and additional resources to support attendees in applying their learning. An overview of the workshop series, with the learning objectives, is provided in Table 1.…”
Section: Workhop Design and Deliverymentioning
confidence: 99%