Behavior change theory, content and delivery of interventions to enhance adherence in chronic respiratory disease: A systematic review


Autoria(s): McCullough, Amanda R.; Ryan, Cristin; Macindoe, Christopher; Yii, Nathan; Bradley, Judy M.; O'Neill, Brenda; Elborn, J. Stuart; Hughes, Carmel M.
Data(s)

01/07/2016

Resumo

Background: We sought to describe the theory used to design treatment adherence interventions, the content delivered, and the mode of delivery of these interventions in chronic respiratory disease. Methods: We included randomized controlled trials of adherence interventions (compared to another intervention or control) in adults with chronic respiratory disease (8 databases searched; inception until March 2015). Two reviewers screened and extracted data: post-intervention adherence (measured objectively); behavior change theory, content (grouped into psychological, education and self-management/supportive, telemonitoring, shared decision-making); and delivery. “Effective” studies were those with p < 0.05 for adherence rate between groups. We conducted a narrative synthesis and assessed risk of bias. Results: 12,488 articles screened; 46 included studies (n = 42,91% in OSA or asthma) testing 58 interventions (n = 27, 47% were effective). Nineteen (33%) interventions (15 studies) used 12 different behavior change theories. Use of theory (n = 11,41%) was more common amongst effective interventions. Interventions were mainly educational, self-management or supportive interventions (n = 27,47%). They were commonly delivered by a doctor (n = 20,23%), in face-to-face (n = 48,70%), one-to-one (n = 45,78%) outpatient settings (n = 46,79%) across 2–5 sessions (n = 26,45%) for 1–3 months (n = 26,45%). Doctors delivered a lower proportion (n = 7,18% vs n = 13,28%) and pharmacists (n = 6,15% vs n = 1,2%) a higher proportion of effective than ineffective interventions. Risk of bias was high in >1 domain (n = 43, 93%) in most studies. Conclusions: Behavior change theory was more commonly used to design effective interventions. Few adherence interventions have been developed using theory, representing a gap between intervention design recommendations and research practice.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/behavior-change-theory-content-and-delivery-of-interventions-to-enhance-adherence-in-chronic-respiratory-disease-a-systematic-review(8c28cd35-2788-4a2f-9019-bd9e41cbc3b9).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2016.05.021

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Fonte

McCullough , A R , Ryan , C , Macindoe , C , Yii , N , Bradley , J M , O'Neill , B , Elborn , J S & Hughes , C M 2016 , ' Behavior change theory, content and delivery of interventions to enhance adherence in chronic respiratory disease: A systematic review ' Respiratory Medicine , vol 116 , pp. 78-84 . DOI: 10.1016/j.rmed.2016.05.021

Tipo

article