Background Patients’ perspective of diabetes and adherence to its prescribed medications is a significant predictor of glycemic control and overall management of the disease. However, there is a paucity of such information in Bangladesh. This study aimed to explore patients’ perspective of diabetes, their experience of taking oral hypoglycemic medications and explore factors that contribute to medication adherence in patients with type 2 diabetes in Bangladesh.Methods We conducted in-depth face-to-face interviews with 12 type 2 diabetes patients attending a tertiary hospital in Dhaka city between February and March, 2014. Participants were purposively sampled representing different age groups, education levels, years since diagnosis with diabetes, and glycemic status, to achieve maximum variation sampling. All interviews were conducted using a topic guide and were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, checked for errors, coded and analyzed by means of a qualitative content analysis framework.ResultsThe data analysis generated rich information on the participants’ knowledge and perception on diabetes, its causes, self-management, medication use, adverse effects of medication use, medication adherence, and impact of diabetes, Although most of the participants demonstrated substantive knowledge on diabetes and its consequences, they also reported numerous misconceptions about the disease. Knowledge on diabetes medication, their appropriate use and side effects was rather poor. Respondents also reported non-compliance to dietary and physical activity advice by their physicians and concerns on diabetes diabetes-induced psychological stress. High cost of medications, concerns over medication side effects and forgetfulness was noted as factors for non-adherence to medication.ConclusionParticipants’ knowledge and perception on diabetes are key factors determining their adherence to medications and, thereby, diabetes management. Healthcare providers should explore to better understand patients’ perspective on diabetes, medication beliefs, identify psychological stress and provide more effective health education interventions to enhance medication adherence.
Patients’ perspective of disease and medication adherence for type 2 diabetes in an urban area in Bangladesh: a qualitative study
S. Islam,T. Biswas,F. A. Bhuiyan,Kamrun Mustafa,A. Islam
Published 2017 in BMC Research Notes
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2017
- Venue
BMC Research Notes
- Publication date
2017-03-21
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- dietary and physical activity advice
Clinical guidance about diet and exercise given for diabetes self-management.
Aliases: diet and exercise advice
- forgetfulness
Difficulty remembering to take medications on schedule.
Aliases: memory lapse, forgetting
- medication adherence
The extent to which prescribed medicines are taken as directed.
Aliases: adherence, compliance
- medication cost
The financial expense of obtaining diabetes medications.
Aliases: cost of medications, drug cost
- medication side effects
Unwanted effects associated with diabetes medicines or their use.
Aliases: adverse effects
- misconceptions about diabetes
Incorrect beliefs or misunderstandings about diabetes discussed by participants in the interviews.
Aliases: misconceptions
- oral hypoglycemic medications
Blood-glucose-lowering medicines taken by mouth for diabetes management.
Aliases: oral hypoglycemics, diabetes pills
- psychological stress
Emotional strain or distress related to living with diabetes.
Aliases: psychological distress, stress
- type 2 diabetes
The chronic glucose-regulation disorder that was the focus of the patient interviews.
Aliases: T2D
REFERENCES
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