5 results on '"Duncan, Polly"'
Search Results
2. Treatment burden in multiple long-term conditions: a mixed-methods study protocol.
- Author
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Johnson, Rachel, Kovalenko, Anastasiia G., Blakeman, Thomas, Panagioti, Maria, Lawton, Michael, Dawson, Shoba, Duncan, Polly, Fraser, Simon D. S., Valderas, Jose M., Chilcott, Simon, Goulding, Rebecca, and Salisbury, Chris
- Subjects
CHRONIC disease treatment ,EVALUATION of medical care ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,PRIMARY health care ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMORBIDITY ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Treatment burden represents the work patients undertake because of their health care, and the impact of that effort on the patient. Most research has focused on older adults (aged >65 years) with multiple long-term conditions (multimorbidity) (MLTC-M), but there are now more younger adults (aged 18-65 years) living with MLTC-M and they may experience treatment burden differently. Understanding experiences of treatment burden, and identifying those most at risk of high treatment burden, are important for designing primary care services to meet their needs. Aim: To understand the treatment burden associated with MLTC-M, for people aged 18-65 years, and how primary care services affect this burden. Design & setting: Mixed-methods study in up to 33 primary care practices in two UK regions. Method: The following two approaches will be used: (i) in-depth qualitative interviews with adults living with MLTC-M (approximately 40 participants) to understand their experiences of treatment burden and the impact of primary care, with a think-aloud aspect to explore face validity of a novel short treatment burden questionnaire (STBQ) for routine clinical use in the initial 15 interviews; (ii) cross-sectional patient survey (approximately 1000 participants), with linked routine medical record data to examine the factors associated with treatment burden for people living with MLTC-M, and to test the validity of STBQ. Conclusion: This study will generate in-depth understanding of the treatment burden experienced by people aged 18-65 years living with MLTC-M, and how primary care services affect this burden. This will inform further development and testing of interventions to reduce treatment burden, and potentially influence MLTC-M trajectories and improve health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Treatment burden for patients with multimorbidity: cross-sectional study with exploration of a single-item measure.
- Author
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Morris, James E, Roderick, Paul J, Harris, Scott, Yao, Guiqing, Crowe, Sam, Phillips, David, Duncan, Polly, and Fraser, Simon DS
- Subjects
COMORBIDITY ,FINANCIAL literacy ,FINANCIAL stress ,SCHEDULING ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Treatment burden is the effort required of patients to look after their health, and the impact this has on their wellbeing. Quantitative data on treatment burden for patients with multimorbidity are sparse, and no single-item treatment burden measure exists.Aim: To determine the extent of, and associations with, high treatment burden among older adults with multimorbidity, and to explore the performance of a novel single-item treatment burden measure.Design and Setting: Cross-sectional postal survey via general practices in Dorset, UK.Method: Patients ≥55 years, living at home, with three or more long-term conditions (LTCs) were identified by practices. Treatment burden was measured using the Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire. Data collected were sociodemographics, LTCs, medications, and characteristics including health literacy and financial resource. Associations with high treatment burden were investigated via logistic regression. Performance of a novel single-item measure of treatment burden was also evaluated.Results: A total of 835 responses were received (response rate 42%) across eight practices. Patients' mean age was 75 years, 55% were female (n = 453), and 99% were white (n = 822). Notably, 39% of patients self-reported fewer than three LTCs (n = 325). Almost one-fifth (18%) of responders reported high treatment burden (n = 150); making lifestyle changes and arranging appointments were particular sources of difficulty. After adjustment, limited health literacy and financial difficulty displayed strong associations with high treatment burden; more LTCs and more prescribed regular medications were also independently associated. The single-item measure discriminated moderately between high and non-high burden with a sensitivity of 89%, but a specificity of 58%.Conclusion: High treatment burden was relatively common, underlining the importance of minimising avoidable burden. More vulnerable patients, with less capacity to manage, are at greater risk of being overburdened. Further development of a single-item treatment burden measure is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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4. Translation, cultural adaptation and validation of the Chinese Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire(C-MTBQ): a study of older hospital patients.
- Author
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Dou, Liyuan, Huang, Juan, Duncan, Polly, and Guo, Lixiang
- Subjects
OLDER patients ,HOSPITAL patients ,COMORBIDITY ,RANK correlation (Statistics) ,INTRACLASS correlation - Abstract
Background: Due to an ageing population, multimorbidity is becoming more common. Treatment burden (the effort required of patients to look after their health and the impact this has on their wellbeing) is prevalent in patients with multimorbidity. The Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire (MTBQ) is a patient-reported outcome measure of treatment burden that has been validated amongst patients with multimorbidity in the UK. The aim of this study was to translate and culturally adapt the MTBQ into Chinese and to assess its reliability and validity in elderly patients with multimorbidity in hospital.Methods: The original English version of the MTBQ was translated into Chinese using Brislin's model of cross-culture translation. The C-MTBQ was piloted on a sample of 30 elderly patients with multimorbidity prior to being completed by 156 Chinese elderly patients with multimorbidity recruited from a hospital in Zhengzhou, China. We examined the proportion of missing data, the distribution of responses and floor and ceiling effects for each question. Factor analysis, Cronbach's alpha, intraclass coefficient and Spearman's rank correlations assessed dimensional structure, internal consistency reliability, test-retest reliability and criterion validity, respectively.Results: The average age of the respondents was 73.5 years (range 60-99 years). The median C-MTBQ global score was 20.8 (interquartile range 12.5-29.2). Significant floor effects were seen for all items. Factor analysis supported a three-factor structure. The C-MTBQ had high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha coefficient, 0.76) and test-retest reliability (the intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.944), the correlations between every item and global scores scored > 0.4. The scale content validity index(S-CVI) was 0.89, and the item level content validity index(I-CVI)was 0.83 ~ 1.00. The criterion validity was 0.875.Conclusion: The Chinese version of MTBQ showed satisfactory reliability and validity in elderly patients with multimorbidity, and could be used as a tool to measure treatment burden of elderly patients with multimorbidity in hospital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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5. Health literacy, multimorbidity, and patient-perceived treatment burden in individuals with cardiovascular disease. A Danish population-based study.
- Author
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Friis, Karina, Lasgaard, Mathias, Pedersen, Marie Hauge, Duncan, Polly, and Maindal, Helle Terkildsen
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HEALTH literacy , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *COMORBIDITY , *MEDICAL personnel , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Objective: The aim was to investigate the association between: 1) multimorbidity and high treatment burden 2) health literacy and high treatment burden, and 3) the interaction between multimorbidity and health literacy in relation to high treatment burden.Methods: We included respondents with cardiovascular disease who participated in a Danish population-based survey from 2017 (N = 2,111). Logistic regression analyses were used to study associations.Results: The study showed that multimorbid individuals with cardiovascular disease were more likely to experience a high treatment burden than individuals with cardiovascular disease only (2+ additional conditions OR 4.16 [2.80-6.18]). Also, individuals with difficulties in understanding health information were more likely to report a high treatment burden than individuals who found it easy to understand information about health (OR 9.97 [6.23-15.95]). Finally, individuals with multimorbidity and difficulties in understanding health information had markedly higher odds of experiencing a high treatment burden.Conclusion: If individuals find it difficult to understand health information, there is a risk they might feel overwhelmed by the treatment.Practice Implications: Healthcare professionals should be aware of health literacy challenges in planning medical treatment particularly for patients with both low health literacy levels and multimorbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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