2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.apnu.2005.02.008
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Visual Feedback Therapy to Enhance Medication Adherence in Psychosis

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Cited by 15 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…A majority (68%) of articles reported high (n = 11; 27%), [17,19,24,27,31,33,37,40,41,43,44] moderate (n = 12; 29%), [11,[14][15][16]18,20,21,25,26,30,38,42] or significant (n = 5; 12%) [13,23,28,29,35] correlation between these types of measures.…”
Section: Correlation Between Self-report and Electronic Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 93%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A majority (68%) of articles reported high (n = 11; 27%), [17,19,24,27,31,33,37,40,41,43,44] moderate (n = 12; 29%), [11,[14][15][16]18,20,21,25,26,30,38,42] or significant (n = 5; 12%) [13,23,28,29,35] correlation between these types of measures.…”
Section: Correlation Between Self-report and Electronic Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Of the 41 actual articles, the disease states were as follows: HIV (n = 18; 43.9%), [11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18]20,26,28,31,33,[35][36][37]43,44] psychotic disorders (n = 4; 9.8%), [29,34,41,49] cardiovascular diseases (n = 3; 7.3%), [32,38,50] hypertension (n = 3; 7.3%), [23,24,27] transplant (n = 2; 4.9%) [21,30] and diabetes mellitus (n = 2; 4.9%). [19,46] The sample sizes ranged from 5 to 1021 (median = 61).…”
Section: Study Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is generally agreed that "lack of insight" is a significant contributor to medication nonadherence. However, there is a great deal of variability in the research literature concerning the magnitude of this association, [15][16][17][18][19][20] and some studies have not found any association whatsoever. [21][22][23] While this is perhaps not surprising given differences in the setting, methods, and definitions of insight and adherence used in various studies, another possible explanation is that certain kinds of cognitive deficits may disrupt any association between attitude about the illness (insight) and behavioral outcomes that are influenced by such an attitude (medication adherence).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…To minimize the loss of data, data were coded at the time of each meeting, every 2 weeks, without showing the subjects the chronology from the electronic monitoring device. From our previous study (Kozuki and Schepp, 2005), we found that, if multiple regimens were prescribed and taken by the patient, adherence rates were similar, and only one electronic monitoring device was used for each participant even if the participant was on more than one medication. Pill counts validated the results of the electronic monitoring and were used to detect possible deceptions.…”
Section: Adherence Measuresmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This stored information was downloaded and presented to the subjects on a computer screen at each visual therapy session. From our previous study (Kozuki and Schepp, 2005) on the feasibility of using an electronic monitoring device with people with schizophrenia, we identified five behavioural patterns of pill-taking behaviours from the continuous adherence data of the 45 electronic monitoring device units utilized. Behavioural feedback was provided based on these five patterns: (i) skipping doses; (ii) complete cessation; (iii) complete irregularity; (iv) irregularities related to a more than once-a-day regimen; (v) drug holiday (Urquhart, 1997).…”
Section: Visual-feedback Therapy (Experimental Condition)mentioning
confidence: 99%