Our goal is to reduce adverse self-medication practices in older adults with hypertension. A computer program developed for older adults (Personal Education Program or PEP) will be modified as the next generation PEP, or PEP-NG, to include an interface to allow clients to enter self-medication behavior data independently on a wireless, touch screen tablet PC. Data entered on the PEP-NG will be analyzed via a secure server (ProHealth) and program content tailored to the specific adverse self-medication behaviors will be delivered. Summaries of ? the reported behaviors with corrective strategies will be printed for both patient and provider so the APRN has a good idea of the client's self-medication practices before beginning the face-to-face interview. Thus, the PEP-NG will make optimal use of the client's waiting time and the APRN's clinical time.
Specific aims are at three levels. 1) To design an interface for the PEP-NG with: a) desirable characteristics for both older adults and primary care providers; and b) minimal user burden. 2) To show that APRNs will increase: a) knowledge concerning potential drug interactions arising from older adults' self-medication practices; b) self-efficacy for teaching older adults about potential drug interactions; c) self-efficacy for communicating with older adults about self-medication; and to c) demonstrate satisfaction using the PEP-NG with clients. 3) To show that older adults using the PEP-NG will: a) increase knowledge concerning potential drug interactions arising from self-medication ? practices; b) increase self-efficacy as to how to avoid potential drug interactions arising from self-medication practice; c) reduce self-reported adverse behaviors associated with potential drug interactions; 4) improve prescription medication adherence; d) achieve target blood pressure readings; and demonstrate e) satisfaction with the PEP-NG and f) the APRN provider relationship. User-sensitive inclusive design methods will be used to develop and test the patient data interface. After beta-testing the PEP-NG in the primary care laboratory, the PEP-NG will be piloted by 20 APRNs affiliated with ProHealth primary care practices. RMANOVA with one within subjects factor (TIME) will be performed on APRNs' outcome measures at time 0, immediate post-instruction, and 3 and 6 months later. APRNs will each recruit 25 clients (500 total) meeting study criteria. The PEP-NG software will randomly assign each APRN's clients to either control (data collection only) and experimental (data collection plus educational intervention with targeted messages). Client outcome will be assessed at 0, 4, 8, 12, and 52 weeks and analyzed as a mixed ANOVA with NURSE and GROUP as between-subjects factors and TIME as a repeated-measures factor. Healthcare utilization will be compared between the 2 groups after 52 weeks and a cost-benefit analysis conducted. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL084208-02
Application #
7122412
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-RPHB-B (50))
Program Officer
Jobe, Jared B
Project Start
2005-09-15
Project End
2008-06-30
Budget Start
2006-07-01
Budget End
2007-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$337,869
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Connecticut
Department
Type
Schools of Nursing
DUNS #
614209054
City
Storrs-Mansfield
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06269
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Neafsey, Patricia J; M'lan, Cyr E; Ge, Miaomiao et al. (2011) Reducing Adverse Self-Medication Behaviors in Older Adults with Hypertension: Results of an e-health Clinical Efficacy Trial. Ageing Int 36:159-191
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Neafsey, Patricia J; Lutkus, Gregory; Newcomb, Jessica et al. (2009) A pilot program at the worksite to reduce adverse self-medication behaviors. Patient Prefer Adherence 3:277-86
Lin, Carolyn A; Neafsey, Patricia J; Strickler, Zoe (2009) Usability testing by older adults of a computer-mediated health communication program. J Health Commun 14:102-18
Neafsey, Patricia J; Anderson, Elizabeth; Peabody, Sheri et al. (2008) Beta testing of a network-based health literacy program tailored for older adults with hypertension. Comput Inform Nurs 26:311-9