Browsing by Subject "adherence"
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Item A Study to Determine Improved Compliance of Biophosphonate Treatment in Subjects with Osteoporosis(2005-02-01) Enard, April T.; Gwirtz, Patricia A.; Jimenez-Williams, Cynthia; Rubin, BernardEnard, April T. A Study to Determine Improved Compliance of Bisphosphonate Treatment in Subjects with Osteoporosis. Master of Science, February 11, 2005. The ability of patients to adhere to treatment regimens is very poor and continues to impede optimal therapy of osteoporosis. The shortcomings in treating osteoporosis are: a) noncompliance and/or lack of continued persistence of therapy, b) efficacy of therapy on bone turnover marker levels and fracture prevalence, and c) tolerability of therapy to patients. Studies have shown that interventions such as education and awareness of bone mineral density promote patient usage compliance. The slightest improvement in compliance allows further understanding of accurate efficacy of medication therapy to fractures, bone marker levels, and overall improvement of bone mass. Increased compliance/persistence allows accurate comparison of bisphosphonates to one another for effectiveness on osteoporosis patients and allows improvement opportunity in treatment modalities that can positively influence the course of osteoporosis. This phase IV study targets compliancy/persistence in bisphosphonate therapy in treatment of osteoporosis.Item The Role of Patient Education in the Patient's Familiarity and Understanding of Treatment(2008-12-01) Bittenbinder, Emelia NoeleBittenbinder, Emelia Noele., The Role of Patient Education in the Patient’s Familiarity and Understanding of Treatment. Master of Science (Clinical Research Management), December 2008 78pp, 10 illustrations, reference list, 19 titles. Purpose: Demonstrate patient education as a viable option for improving patient adherence. Hypothesis: Patients information about their treatments. This knowledge about specific study treatments allows the patient to be more familiar with administering treatment, thus leading to greater treatment adherence. Design: A presentation over the absorption and distribution of a sublingual medication and the importance of taking this medication properly for the subject to view. After viewing the presentation, the subject completed a short subjective survey. A survey regarding the subject’s adherence was completed by the study coordinator. Results: The subject and study coordinator provided positive feedback and despite the lack of participants, this protocol was shown as a feasible method of patient education.Item Understanding the Psychosocial Factors of Communication that Underlie Colorectal Cancer-Screening Adherence.(2009-08-01) Dunn, Michael; Cardarelli, RobertoThis pilot study was the first to utilize the Interpersonal Processes of Care (IPC) instrument to investigate physician/patient communication and the extent to which it impacts a patient’s adherence to the recommendation to obtain a colorectal cancer screening test. A total of 45 individuals participated in this cross-sectional study. Potential participants (50 years of age or older in 2007) were recruited from the billing records of the University of North Texas Health Science Center/Department of Family Medicine. All potential participants had been seen by their primary care physician for a preventative visit in 2007. While no IPC factor was found to be significantly associated with adherence, one IPC factor, hurried communication, trended towards significance (pvalue 0.055) when combined in a predictive model that also measured a subject’s level of social support and number of persons that lived with them.