Education of Independent Elderly in the Responsible Use of Prescription Medications
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Drug Intelligence & Clinical Pharmacy
- Vol. 14 (5) , 335-342
- https://doi.org/10.1177/106002808001400503
Abstract
A pilot study to test the effectiveness of medication instruction was carried out using 61 voluntary participants age 65 and older. They were interviewed regarding their medication taking, and instruction was individualized using one of four teaching modes: oral; written; oral and written; and oral and written combined with memory aids. Postinstruction interviews revealed no significant difference in compliance among all groups. The preinstruction mean compliance score of all subjects was 98.8 percent. Although compliance, judged specifically on the basis of the prescription label instructions, was extremely high both before and after instruction, drug-taking behavior and knowledge did change. The preinstruction compliance score does not necessarily reflect safe or desirable drug-taking behavior. There was no specific information given to clients with their prescriptions and prescription medications, indicating, for drug-therapy decision makers, a much broader problem than noncompliance.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patients and Therapies: Getting the Two TogetherNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- Does Intervention by a Nurse Improve Medication Compliance?Archives of internal medicine (1960), 1978
- The Nurse and Drug SurveillanceDrug Information Journal, 1976
- Acute Drug Reactions Among the ElderlyJournal of Gerontology, 1975
- Increasing patient compliance through the applied analysis of behaviorPreventive Medicine, 1975
- Medication use and misuse: Physician-patient discrepanciesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1975
- Patient ComplianceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1973
- COMPLIANCE WITH MEDICAL REGIMENSNursing Research, 1970
- Gaps in Doctor-Patient CommunicationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1969
- Medication Errors Made by Elderly, Chronically Ill PatientsAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1962