Understanding the Factors Influencing Older Adults’ Decision-Making about Their Use of Over-The-Counter Medications—A Scenario-Based Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Senior SectionTM
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- a methods paper describing the task simulation and situational interviewing approach used to capture participants’ decisions when selecting and using OTC medications;
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- a methods paper describing the process of classifying types of misuse and operationalizing these misuse constructs;
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- a quantitative analysis of the Senior Section’s effect on the occurrence of standardized medication misuse classifications [35];
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- a qualitative analysis classifying types of OTC selection processes for older adults, including the results from a latent semantic analysis of older adults’ interviews;
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- an industrial engineering analytic method to conceptually diagram older adults’ cognitive decision-making process while considering and selecting an OTC medication.
1.2. Objective
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Setting
2.2. Recruitment
2.3. Interview Data Collection
- A simulated task exercise in which the older adults were asked to select an OTC medication by navigating to the required aisle in the pharmacy—the goal of simulation task exercise was to understand how older adults select a medication as they moved through the store;
- A situational interview, conducted in a semi-private area in the pharmacy, in which the older adults were asked to provide information on how they would use the selected medication—the goal of the situational interview was to capture how older adults intend to use the medication they selected during the simulated task exercise.
2.4. Data Management and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Medication Use Concerns
3.1.1. Activity Concerns
“And if I do [an activity] to stress, then, I can’t take it [medication] at night, though. It messes with my sleep.”
3.1.2. Medication Concerns
“About an hour after breakfast or so… I never take it together with my Synthroid. I just don’t feel like it’s a good idea.”
3.1.3. Health Concerns
“And you know, my symptoms are most in the morning, and then towards afternoon and that, well, they get better. And then towards the evening, they deteriorate because, you know, when you have asthma, you always deteriorate in the evening, not terribly, but you do. So anyway, I would take it in the morning, and I’d look out for, I don’t go right outside. I keep the air conditioning going, and I’m very careful because, you know, I really do have severe asthma.”
3.2. Following Label Instructions
3.2.1. Following Label Instructions without Deviation
“I would follow the label to a T because I believe in doing that…..I’m pretty rigid about following what it says on the label because I feel this has been tested, and that’s the information that’s given for your safety and well-being.”
“I am very strict at following what it says, because I hate taking medication, and I hate taking too much, and I always worry about side effects or doing something wrong. So I, in fact every day, even when I take it, I look at the container, and I make sure I’m taking the right thing. And I’ll look at it, and like, okay, that’s my allergy pill, and then I’ll take one every morning.”
3.2.2. Conditional Following of Label Instructions
“Would I exceed the six? Well, there’s a possibility, but I’m not sure that I would.”
“Well, I read the label to see how many you should take, you know, and how often you should take it. But very seldom do I take it every four hours or every six [label instructions]. I just take it when I need it, you know. And then I make sure that if I do need it more, if it’s that bad, then I do know when I took it the first time, so I know if it’s within limits. But I’m not a, I don’t like to take a lot of pills if I don’t have to.”
3.3. Wait Time to Medication Effect
“I’d probably, I mean, I wouldn’t take anything else until, you know, if this is good for four hours, and it says two soft gels every four hours, so I would probably wait four hours.”
“Probably about, well, if I, if my symptoms didn’t change, you know, and you didn’t mention wheezing and gasping and all of that. If they didn’t change, I would wait three days, and I’d see how I’m doing.”
3.4. Responses to OTC Medication Not Working
3.4.1. Switching Medication
- Delayed switch:“I might come back and get something else. Say this just not doing the trick, and then they usually will find something stronger for me.”
- Immediate switch:“You know, if it was getting close to bedtime, I’d probably just take a couple more Benadryl and an aspirin, and then just, you know, hope that that would do the trick.”
3.4.2. Taking More of Same Medication
- Immediate reactions:“If I woke up, and if it was bothering me, yeah, I’d take another dose in four hours.”
- Delayed reactions-:(Interviewer: “And well, so if it didn’t work, what would you do, would take some more pills?”)“Yeah, I’d take a couple more.”
3.4.3. Switching to Non-Pharmacological Treatment
“I would not be happy. I would, I’d get some herbal tea, or, you know, drink orange, I mean, drink an orange juice. I’d be taking one of those other ones, the Emergen-C thing. I’d be doing something to help boost the immune system, making sure I ate better, drank more water, something.”
“I mean, you know, I possibly may take a warm shower. I generally don’t, the muscle aches and etc. are usually generalized, so using ice isn’t an option because it’s all over.”
3.4.4. Considering Seeing Healthcare Professional
“I would probably go back and talk to the pharmacist and say, I’m thinking about getting this arthritis one, unless you have something else I should, you’d recommend, and see what he recommends rather than waste my money on another medication that might not work. I really rely on the pharmacist.”
“Well, I would probably, I have [insurance], so they have a, my healthy chart or something. MyChart, yeah, yeah. So I’d go on there, and I’d e-mail my doctor, and then the nurse would get it and, because I get a fast answer doing that.”
3.4.5. Dealing with the Problem
“Well, like I said, I do a lot of, you know, relaxation. If nothing really works and then I determine, and this would be completely different if I actually had a job where I had to be somewhere, but if I really couldn’t fall asleep, and I tried everything, again, I would get up and read or watch TV. I wouldn’t try and take something that wasn’t working. I might even, I have already done yoga. You know, just let my husband sleep, and I run into the other room. And, but that’s what I would do.”
“I think I’d probably let, I’ve been a distance runner, and so I know you have to suck up some of it, and I err more on the side of letting something go.”
3.5. Decision to Stop Medication
“I’d only take it until it, the pain started going away. There’s no need to take it, you know, if you don’t have the pain.”
“If it keeps working. If I get a lot, enough congestion up that I feel I don’t, I’m not doing too badly, then I just stop taking it for a while, and then I have some when I need it again.”
3.6. Sources of Information
3.6.1. Pharmacists
“I would see the pharmacist. And we love the pharmacists here at [the pharmacy]. They’re really informative.”
“I think I would go to the pharmacist first, and, or maybe check it out online. See if there is something like that because there’s some, a few sources that are reputable. I guess WebMD is kind of okay.”
3.6.2. Other Healthcare Practitioners
“We’re on the MyChart with our physician… And so if I had any questions, I would probably send a MyChart message to my doctor.”
“Probably go to the doctor first and see what he said.”
3.6.3. Other Sources
“…just talk to friends. I’m not a big doctor person.”
“Epocrates. And it’s the same drug program that my doctor uses. So I know we’re on the same page with that one, so… I would Google the medication. And well then, I would call the pharmacist and say, okay, what do you think of this? You know, if I couldn’t find enough information on the drug itself, I would call the pharmacist before I call my doctor”.
3.7. Safety Implications
3.7.1. OTC-Induced Health Problems
“Yes, it can cause ulcers, the doctor said. That’s why they don’t, well, that’s why my doctor didn’t want me to really take a lot of ibuprofen, where he was going to the acetaminophen area. And even now he knows I take it, but he’s fine with, you know, just limited dose on it. But that’s what he said. It could lead to stomach ulcers”.
“No. I mean, you know, when you read the back it always says if you have high blood pressure, if you have diabetes, if you have this or that or whatever, don’t do this, and I don’t fall into any of those categories. You know, I have a little bit of aches and pains from arthritis. The medications I take are pretty stable. I’ve been on them for a long time, so.”
3.7.2. OTC Interactions with Other Medications
“With what I currently take, yes. And I do have a list of medications because sometimes I take, I have to take an opioid, and I have two different opioids I take. And I have a list as to whether I can take Tylenol, yes or no with each of the opioids, and Aleve, yes or no with each of the opioids, because I can’t remember it. So I write it down. And if I were unsure, if I couldn’t find my list, then I would call over here and say, can I take Aleve and Tramadol at the same time? That’s where I got this information initially from.”
“No. I don’t, if I have to take a hydrocodone pain pill for my back, I never take [the selected medication] along with it, never, ever, because they’ve both got acetaminophen in them, and I’m conscious of that”.
3.7.3. OTC Interactions with Health Conditions
“The gastric reflux, which is not really much of an issue right now. But if I were having problems with that, I’d have to switch over to the acetaminophen, even though it’s less effective.”
“Pretty much. It just says heart attack and stroke. Allergy, I’ve never had an allergy. Stomach bleeding, I don’t have ulcers or bleeding products. I don’t take a blood thinner, so I’m not at high risk for that, these issues.”
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sleep scenario | Recently, you have been having (more) difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep. You are here at Shopko to look for a medication that can help you sleep. |
Pain scenario | You are having soreness and muscle aches. It is not bad enough to call your doctor. You have not taken any medication to help with these aches yet. You are here at Shopko to look for a medication that can help you feel better. |
Cough/cold/allergy scenario | For the past three days you have had a runny nose, sore throat, felt “stuffy”, and your head is congested. You do not have a fever and it is not bad enough to call your doctor. You have not taken any medication for your symptoms yet, but you are here at Shopko to look for a medication that can help you feel better. |
Theme | Definition of Theme | Interview Question Generating the Theme |
---|---|---|
Medication use concerns | Older-adult concerns potentially influencing their decisions about the dosage, frequency, and timing of the selected OTC medication. | How would you take this medication?
|
Following label instructions | Older-adult intentions to follow label instructions on the medication bottle when describing their potential OTC medication use. | How would you take this medication?
|
Wait time to medication effect | Older-adult interpretations of the amount of time they would wait for the medication to begin alleviating symptoms of a condition. | How long would you wait to see if the medication is working? |
Response to medication not working | Older-adult perceptions of strategies in response to insufficient or no therapeutic effect of selected OTC medication. | What would you do if the medication did not work?
|
Decision to stop medication | Older-adult explanations about how they decide to stop taking a medication. | How would you decide when to stop taking the medication?
|
Sources to seek information | Older-adult preferences of reliable sources to consult in case they require information on how to use the selected medication. | What would you do if you needed more information about how to take this medication? |
Safety implication | Older-adult knowledge and beliefs on problems arising from the selected medication and interactions with existing health conditions/other medications. | What health problems might come from taking this medication? Is this medication safe to take with the other medications you take? Is this medication safe to take with your health conditions? |
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Share and Cite
Shah, S.; Gilson, A.M.; Jacobson, N.; Reddy, A.; Stone, J.A.; Chui, M.A. Understanding the Factors Influencing Older Adults’ Decision-Making about Their Use of Over-The-Counter Medications—A Scenario-Based Approach. Pharmacy 2020, 8, 175. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030175
Shah S, Gilson AM, Jacobson N, Reddy A, Stone JA, Chui MA. Understanding the Factors Influencing Older Adults’ Decision-Making about Their Use of Over-The-Counter Medications—A Scenario-Based Approach. Pharmacy. 2020; 8(3):175. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030175
Chicago/Turabian StyleShah, Shweta, Aaron M. Gilson, Nora Jacobson, Apoorva Reddy, Jamie A. Stone, and Michelle A. Chui. 2020. "Understanding the Factors Influencing Older Adults’ Decision-Making about Their Use of Over-The-Counter Medications—A Scenario-Based Approach" Pharmacy 8, no. 3: 175. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030175
APA StyleShah, S., Gilson, A. M., Jacobson, N., Reddy, A., Stone, J. A., & Chui, M. A. (2020). Understanding the Factors Influencing Older Adults’ Decision-Making about Their Use of Over-The-Counter Medications—A Scenario-Based Approach. Pharmacy, 8(3), 175. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy8030175