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Asthma is a common lung condition that cannot be cured, although usually it can be effectively controlled with available treatments. Yet, it is well recognised that 70% of patients are non-adherent to their asthma treatment.
Personalising treatment by offering the most relevant interventions based on the patient's psychological/behavioural needs results in great success. However, health care providers have limited available resources to deliver a patient-centred approach to their psychological/behavioural needs, resulting in a current one-size-fits-all strategy due to the non-feasible nature of existing surveys.
The solution would be to provide health care professionals with a clinically feasible questionnaire that identifies the patients personal psychological/behavioural factors to adherence.
Full description
Asthma is a common lung condition affecting over 5.4 million people in the UK, for some people, it can affect daily activities and lead to life-threatening consequences. (Asthma UK 2020). Asthma cannot be cured, but it can usually be effectively controlled with available treatments provided they are taken as recommended; however, it is well recognised that up to 70% of patients do not take their asthma treatments as recommended (are non-adherent). This is perhaps not unexpected in the context of a chronic condition requiring daily treatments, which must be taken even when the person feels well. People may also have concerns about using long-term medicines (including steroid inhalers,) or there may be other psychological/behavioural barriers to adherence. Non-adherence to asthma treatments results in poor asthma control with persisting asthma symptoms, more frequent asthma attacks and greater impairment in quality of life. There are also significant economic implications associated with 'wasted' medications and additional healthcare utilisation, such as doctors' appointments and visits to A&E, which contribute to the overall cost of asthma care in the UK, exceeding £1 billion per year.
Health care professionals play an important role in engaging and educating patients about the importance of their asthma treatments, monitoring asthma control and identifying whether a patient is adherent or not. Adherence is complex involving (1) being able to start prescribed medications; (2) taking the medications as prescribed (correct dose, inhalation technique, and frequency); and (3) persistence (obtaining refills to maintain adherence over time). There are limited resources available in a busy health care setting to ensure a complete understanding of each individual's psychological/behavioural barriers, with a one-size-fits-all approach adopted with limited success. As such, there is a persistent unmet need for a tool that can effectively identify these barriers to adherence in a clinical setting, allowing health care professionals to provide effective personalised treatments for non-adherence in patients with asthma.
It is important that the psychological needs of patients can be easily assessed to allow for the patients' personal needs to be understood, promoted, improved, and supported (Lyons & Chamberlain, 2006). When focusing on adherence behaviour, currently, the tools available are questionnaires, but these are long and complex to complete. The COM-B model is a new questionnaire that is shorter and easier for patients to complete. It involves three key components: Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation (Michie et al., 2017). These components were grouped from current health psychological theories of behaviour and behaviour change, therefore, providing a theoretical lens through which to view the physical capability, psychological capability, physical opportunity, social opportunity, reflective motivation, and automatic motivation of individuals. The information gathered from the COM-B framework can then be used to identify what needs to change for a behavioural change intervention to be successful (Michie, Van Stralen & West, 2011).
An easily accessible theory-based tool (a questionnaire) that can identify the psychological and behavioural barriers of patients with asthma who are non-adherent with their treatment is urgently required. This will allow healthcare professionals to use effective personalised interventions to support improved medication use whilst recognising and meeting the psychological needs of patients with asthma. Additionally, the Covid pandemic has changed the way people with asthma access their care with a move to remote consultations and questionnaire completion. The COM-B questionnaire may well be suitable for this approach. Still, it is essential to assess digital readiness in this population to understand whether this is feasible and inform the design of future studies if the COM-B questionnaire proves to be successful.
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Exploratory objectives:
This study will employ a cross-sectional survey design. It will be delivered online through the REDCap platform. One hundred and forty six participants will be recruited when attending their routine clinical review with the asthma service or whilst an inpatient at Queen Alexandra Hospital - this is based on a sample size that has been calculated using GPower software. Participants will be asked to complete a set of questionnaires that takes no longer than 20 minutes to complete. The questionnaires used have all been verified, and permission to use them in the study has been given. They will assess:
Patient data that is routinely collected, such as demographics, asthma characteristics, asthma control, and medication regimen, will be recorded on an electronic data capture form (e-CRF) through the REDCap platform by a member of the research team.
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172 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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