TY - JOUR
T1 - [Patient anxiety and expectations surrounding the use of medication]
AU - Kikuchi, Toshiaki
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Patients who take prescription drugs are thought to feel both "anxiety" and "expectations" surrounding medication use. Anxiety is felt regarding medication effectiveness, side effects, and potential dependency, and is believed to impact medication adherence, which declines to less than 50% after six months. A good therapeutic relationship between patients and physicians, which allows discussion of such topics as side effects, or the duration of ongoing medication use, is required to relieve patient anxiety, but doctor-patient communication usually does not meet patients' expectations: A discrepancy exists between what clinicians report they communicate to patients, and patients' perceptions of what they were told. At the same time, patients also maintain positive expectations for change induced by pharmacotherapy. These expectations can be inferred to be closely related to the placebo effect, which is reported to account for 30% of overall therapeutic effect. However, at the beginning of treatment, few patients are seeking pharmacotherapy; rather, they hope to share their worries with physicians, or talk about the difficulties of their illness with therapists. Physicians must therefore work to understand patients' treatment preferences, and should make initial treatment decisions only after sharing information and thoroughly consulting with patients.
AB - Patients who take prescription drugs are thought to feel both "anxiety" and "expectations" surrounding medication use. Anxiety is felt regarding medication effectiveness, side effects, and potential dependency, and is believed to impact medication adherence, which declines to less than 50% after six months. A good therapeutic relationship between patients and physicians, which allows discussion of such topics as side effects, or the duration of ongoing medication use, is required to relieve patient anxiety, but doctor-patient communication usually does not meet patients' expectations: A discrepancy exists between what clinicians report they communicate to patients, and patients' perceptions of what they were told. At the same time, patients also maintain positive expectations for change induced by pharmacotherapy. These expectations can be inferred to be closely related to the placebo effect, which is reported to account for 30% of overall therapeutic effect. However, at the beginning of treatment, few patients are seeking pharmacotherapy; rather, they hope to share their worries with physicians, or talk about the difficulties of their illness with therapists. Physicians must therefore work to understand patients' treatment preferences, and should make initial treatment decisions only after sharing information and thoroughly consulting with patients.
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M3 - Article
C2 - 25711118
AN - SCOPUS:84925286115
SN - 0033-2658
VL - 116
SP - 752
EP - 757
JO - Seishin shinkeigaku zasshi = Psychiatria et neurologia Japonica
JF - Seishin shinkeigaku zasshi = Psychiatria et neurologia Japonica
IS - 9
ER -