Pharmacists Can Correct Asthma Controller Medication Underuse – Pharmacy Times


The Pharmaceutical Journal

Pharmacists Can Correct Asthma Controller Medication Underuse
Pharmacy Times
A study published May 4, 2015 in Pediatrics analyzed data from 35,467 asthma medication prescriptions filled between January 31, 2010, and January 30, 2012, for children aged 2 to 17 years in Hamilton County, Ohio. Classifying the asthma medications as …
Pharmacies could play a role in reducing asthma-related deathsThe Pharmaceutical Journal

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New study finds inhaler reminders dramatically improve asthma controller … – Science Codex

New study finds inhaler reminders dramatically improve asthma controller
Science Codex
ATS 2014, SAN DIEGO— Reminders prompting asthma patients to take their control inhalers if they miss a dose significantly improve medication adherence, according to a primary-care based study conducted by a research team in Australia. In this six

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New study finds inhaler reminders dramatically improve asthma controller … – Medical Xpress

New study finds inhaler reminders dramatically improve asthma controller
Medical Xpress
Reminders prompting asthma patients to take their control inhalers if they miss a dose significantly improve medication adherence, according to a primary-care based study conducted by a research team in Australia. In this six-month investigation

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Time and Risk Preferences and the Use of Asthma Controller Medication.

Related Articles

Time and Risk Preferences and the Use of Asthma Controller Medication.

Pediatrics. 2013 Mar 11;

Authors: Brandt S, Dickinson B

Abstract
OBJECTIVES:We investigated the role of risk tolerance, time preference, and asthma-specific attitudes in adherence to asthma control medications.METHODS:Students with persistent asthma completed an online survey on asthma beliefs, risk tolerance, and time preference (n = 47). The time preference questions measure the degree to which the individual discounts future outcomes and essentially prefers immediate gratification to delayed gratification. The risk tolerance questions indicate the individual’s dislike of uncertainty about outcomes. We analyzed the relationship between the independent and dependent variables.RESULTS:Feelings of embarrassment and concern about medication, as well as risk tolerance and time preference, were found to be significant predictors of adherence to control medication in the logistic regression. Analysis of probabilities associated with different profiles shows that at high rates of risk tolerance and discounting of future outcomes, the probability of adherence is near 0 regardless of asthma-specific attitudes. Asthma attitudes have a statistically significant effect for individuals with low rates of risk tolerance and time preference.CONCLUSIONS:The risk tolerance and time preferences of the target group should be considered when designing an asthma-intervention program. Individuals who strongly prefer immediate gratification over future benefits and are willing to tolerate uncertain outcomes are unlikely to adhere to controller medication, regardless of their asthma attitudes. In contrast, efforts to affect relevant attitudes will be most fruitful for individuals with low rates of risk tolerance and time preference. However, as we cannot extrapolate these results to a larger population, we must view them with caution.

PMID: 23478866 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Use of Asthma Controller Meds on the Rise Among US Kids – Pharmaceutical Processing


MD News (press release)

Use of Asthma Controller Meds on the Rise Among US Kids
Pharmaceutical Processing
According to a report from the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the percentage of children with asthma in the United States who use a prescription "controller" medicine has nearly doubled since the late 1990s, as reported Thursday in
Pediatric Asthma Drug Prescriptions on the UpswingMD News (press release)

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