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Older people's experiences of changed medication appearance : a survey

Williamson, T; Greene, L; Prashar, A; Schafheutle, E

Authors

T Williamson

L Greene

A Prashar

E Schafheutle



Abstract

This report details a survey of older people's experiences of changed medication appearance. The aims of the study were:
• To develop a questionnaire in partnership with older people to survey older people’s views on fluctuating medication appearance
• To elicit older people’s experiences of medication that changed appearance due to ‘generic prescribing’ and ‘parallel import’ practices and its impact on their medication taking practices.


These common pharmacy practices mean that the same tablet medication can be issued to older people in different colours, sizes and shapes to their previous prescriptions. Older people from a local User/Carer Forum highlighted these problems to the research team and asked that we investigate to explore the extent of the problem.


An eight-item questionnaire was developed and distributed to 2000 older people (50 years+) across participating PCTs in Greater Manchester in 2008. A 29% response rate was achieved. The data was analysed using the SPSS statistical package. Findings include:


•63.3% experienced a change in the appearance of their tablet medications.
•74.1% did not seek advice regarding the change in the appearance of their tablet medications.
•Older people noted changes to the actual tablets, tablet packaging and written information that accompanies tablets. Changes are occurring to the colour, size and shape of tablets more than changes to packaging and written information.


The majority of respondents had experienced changes in the appearance of their prescribed tablet medication in the previous two years which were not due to change in medication or dose etc. Worryingly, for some respondents, these changes prompted negative experiences such as anxiety, confusion and upset. Of particular concern was that a small number omitted the affected tablet medications and did not seek help or advice from GPs, pharmacists or relatives.


Six older people have been study advisors from inception to dissemination of this study and significantly added to its quality. The study demonstrates substantive public engagement / user involvement in research. The findings suggest nurses and others have a role to play in promoting better medicines management and identifying those most at risk from changed appearance of medications.

Citation

Williamson, T., Greene, L., Prashar, A., & Schafheutle, E. (2009). Older people's experiences of changed medication appearance : a survey

Report Type Project Report
Publication Date Apr 1, 2009
Deposit Date Feb 8, 2010
Publicly Available Date Feb 8, 2010
ISBN 9781905732623
Keywords older people
generic prescribing
parallel imports
survey
public engagement
user involvement
medications
medicines
Publisher URL http://www.ihscr.salford.ac.uk/SCNMCR/index

Files

Meds_Survey_Final_report_CompleteApr09.pdf (258 Kb)
PDF

Version
Full final report


Meds_Summary_Survey_Final_report_Complete_Apr09.pdf (161 Kb)
PDF

Version
Summary report





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