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Item The Effects of Postoperative Physician Phone Calls for Hand and Wrist Fractures: A Prospective, Randomized Controlled Trial(Cureus, 2022-02-14) Loewenstein, Scott N.; Pittelkow, Eric; Kukushliev, Vasil V.; Hadad, Ivan; Adkinson, Joshua; Surgery, School of MedicineBackground: In this study, we sought to determine if postoperative physician phone calls following hand and wrist fracture surgery improve patient outcomes, satisfaction, and treatment adherence. Methodology: We prospectively enrolled 24 consecutive adult patients who underwent outpatient surgery for isolated hand and wrist fractures at a single, metropolitan, safety-net hospital over one year to receive an additional physician phone call starting on postoperative day one. We measured preoperative and postoperative Brief Michigan Hand Questionnaire (bMHQ) composite score, overall satisfaction on a five-point Likert scale, compliance with treatment recommendations, presence of complications, discharge instructions reading level, and clarity of discharge and follow-up instructions. The surgical team was blinded to the treatment arm. Results: The bMHQ score improved 26% after surgery; however, there was no difference in absolute score change between groups (12.2 vs. 6.5, p = 0.69). Most patients were satisfied throughout all stages of care, but postoperative satisfaction did not differ between groups (1.4 vs. 2.5, p = 0.21). There was a stronger correlation between patient hand function and satisfaction starting one month after surgery (R2 = 0.502, p = 0.002) than preoperatively (R2 = 0.252, p = 0.029). Immediately following surgery, most patients stated that discharge instructions were clear, and the average readability was below the average patient education level. Despite this, 13% removed their splint or Kirschner wires, 67% did not follow up within a week of recommendation, 62% did not complete postoperative treatment, and 33% had complications. Conclusions: Postoperative phone calls by physicians did not improve compliance with recommendations, patient-rated outcome measures, or clinical outcomes among our hand and wrist fracture patient population.Item Illness Representation and Medication Adherence of Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease(2012-03-16) McManus, M. Sue; Welch, Janet L.; Rawl, Susan M.; Sloan, Rebecca S.; Halstead, Judith A.Chronic kidney disease (CKD) places a high personal and economic burden globally on individuals, families, and society. Although kidney protective medications slow the progression of CKD to end stage kidney disease, adherence to these medications is inadequate. The primary purposes of this study are to: 1) describe the illness and treatment beliefs of CKD patients in stage 3 guided by the Common Sense M model (CSM); and 2) examine the relationship of those beliefs with adherence to renal protective medications, ACE-I. Secondary purposes of this study include determining adherence levels of ACE-I among patients with CKD stage 3; examining relationships between individual and clinical characteristics with patient beliefs and medication adherence with ACE-I; and examining the relationship between the Medication Adherence Report Scale (MARS) and the Medication Possession Ratio (MPR). Using a descriptive cross-sectional design, a convenience sample of 92 individuals with Stage 3 CKD was obtained from a Midwestern VA medical center. Data were collected through self-administered mailed surveys and medical record reviews. Data analyses were performed using descriptive statistics, correlation, t-tests and ANOVA. Seventeen symptoms experienced were perceived as related to CKD by at least one respondent with most reporting legs/feet swelling (n=31). Top perceived cause of CKD was aging (60%). Revised Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-R) items were scored from 1 to 5 with higher scores indicating perceptions of higher personal and treatment control of chronic, cyclical illness with serious consequences and negative emotional reactions. In this study, the CKD timeline was perceived as a long-term chronic rather than short-term acute condition (M = 3.8), with minimal cyclical exacerbations (M = 2.7), and moderate severity of consequences (M = 3.1). Respondents perceived having both, but more personal control than treatment control of CKD (M = 3.5 v 3.2). Participants did not perceive CKD as related to a great negative emotional response (M = 2.8). Illness Representations were not found to be significantly correlated with self-reported medication adherence. Medication adherence levels by self-report (M = 4.8 [5 = perfect adherence]) and pharmacy refill records (73% had perfect refill ratio of 1:1) reveal highly adherent levels among this sample.Item The influence of decision-making preferences on medication adherence for persons with severe mental illness in primary health care(2014-10) Wright-Berryman, Jennifer; Kim, Hea-WonPeople 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.Item Personality traits as a potential predictor of willingness to undergo various orthodontic treatments(Allen Press, 2013) Hansen, Vincent; Liu, Sean Shih-Yao; Schrader, Stuart M.; Dean, Jeffery A.; Stewart, Kelton T.; Orthodontics and Oral Facial Genetics, School of DentistryObjective: To establish an association between patient personality traits and potential willingness to undergo various orthodontic treatments. Materials and methods: One hundred adolescent individuals aged 12-16 years completed an anonymous electronic questionnaire via Survey Monkey. The 24-item questionnaire contained three major sections: patient demographics, a modified Big Five Inventory (BFI)-10 personality index, and a willingness to undergo treatment assessment. Multiple-variable linear regression analyses were used to determine the associations among age, gender, ethnicity, and the five personality traits simultaneously with willingness to undergo treatment. Statistical significance was set at P ≤ .05. Results: Ninety-six of the 100 individuals were included in the statistical analysis. Age, ethnicity, and gender failed to correlate with potential willingness to undergo orthodontic treatment. Several personality dimensions within the modified BFI-10 (agreeableness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism) were significantly associated with willingness to undergo various orthodontic treatments (P ≤ .05). Agreeableness demonstrated positive correlations with five treatment modalities, while both conscientiousness and neuroticism exhibited negative associations with a single treatment modality. Openness and extraversion were the only personality dimensions that failed to associate with any of the treatment modalities. Four of the nine treatment modalities had no association with patient demographics or a patient's personality dimensions. Conclusions: Personality traits are useful in predicting a patient's potential willingness to participate in various orthodontic treatments. The agreeableness dimension provided the most utility in predicting patient willingness. Age, ethnicity, and gender were not significant in predicting patient willingness.Item Physiological Traits and Adherence to Obstructive Sleep Apnea Treatment in Patients with Stroke(American Thoracic Society, 2020-06-15) Zinchuk, Andrey V.; Redeker, Nancy S.; Chu, Jen-hwa; Liang, Jiasheng; Stepnowsky, Carl; Brandt, Cynthia A.; Bravata, Dawn M.; Wellman, Andrew; Sands, Scott A.; Yaggi, Henry K.; Medicine, School of MedicineItem Role of patients’ perception of barriers to taking medication on medication adherence among patients with diabetes: development and psychometric evaluation of the murage-marrero-monahan medication barriers scale (4m scale), patient characteristics associated with medication barriers, and association of medication barriers and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk(2014) Murage, Mwangi James; Swanson, G. Marie; Marrero, David G.; Wessel, JenniferMedication adherence remains a problem among Type-2 diabetes (T2D) patients despite availability of effective treatments. Three analyses of extant data sets were conducted to examine barriers to using medication as prescribed as an alternate method to assess medication adherence: 1) development and psychometric evaluation of the Murage-Marrero-Monahan-Medication barriers (4M) scale to assess patients’ perceived barriers; 2) patient demographic factors associated with barriers to using medication as prescribed, and 3) the association between patients’ perceived barriers to medication use and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factor control.Twelve focus groups and a cross-sectional study of 362 T2D patients contributed to develop and evaluate psychometric properties of the 4M scale. A cross-sectional survey of 964 T2D patients was used for the other two studies. Analysis of covariance identified demographic factors associated with reported barriers. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify barriers associated with CVD risk factors (glucose, blood pressure and lipids) categorized as either poor or good control. Exploratory factor analysis with Varimax rotation resulted in a 19-item 4M scale with acceptable psychometric properties. As a five-domain (or single-domain) structure, coefficient alpha ranged from 0.70 to 0.83 (0.92). Both structures demonstrated discriminant validity and known-group validity. Age was inversely associated with all identified barriers while income was inversely associated with poor communication with providers and side effects. A unit increase in the overall barrier mean score on the 4M scale was associated with 92% increase in the odds of having poor control of two or more CVD risk factors compared to good control of all three risk factors (adjusted OR=1.92, 95% CI: 1.16–3.17; p<0.05). The 4M scale demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties in assessing barriers to using medication among T2D patients. Poor medication adherence has been previously associated with CVD risk. In this study, greater barriers were associated with poorer control of CVD risk factors making barriers a potential alternative to medication adherence, whose current assessment methods are limited. The 4M scale has the advantage to identify specific barriers inhibiting medication use that can facilitate patient-provider discussions and the development of targeted interventions.