BackgroundTreatment beliefs and illness consequence have been shown to impact medication adherence in patients with years of asthma experience. These relationships are unknown in patients with early experience.ObjectiveThe purpose was to test the relationship between illness consequence, treatment beliefs, treatment satisfaction and medication adherence intentions in healthy subjects exposed to an asthma scenario.MethodsA 2×2×2 factorial design experiment was conducted in 91 healthy University student subjects. Each student was randomized to receive one scenario with varying levels of illness consequence (high/low), treatment concerns (high/low) and treatment necessity (high/low). After reading the scenarios the students responded to questi...
In this thesis we aimed to further deepen knowledge on factors associated with nonadherence to provi...
MNA Van Steenis,1 JA Driesenaar,2 JM Bensing,2,3 R Van Hulten,4 PC Souverein,4 L Van Dijk,2,4 PAGM D...
Contains fulltext : 53471.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
Objective: The aim was to better understand how beliefs influence medication adherence in asthma. Me...
Purpose: Patients’ decisions about whether or not to adhere to their prescribed regimens are shaped ...
Publisher Copyright: © 2017 The Author(s). Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reser...
We thank the study participants whose data were used in this analysis. Medical writing support in th...
Objectives: The objective of study is to estimate the role of counseling on the diseased patients wi...
Abstract Background The problem of nonadherence to therapy is a key reason of insufficient asthma c...
The present study was designed to evaluate the degree to which variations in reported adherence to p...
AbstractCompliance by patients to prescribed treatment regimens can be considered as the interface b...
Malin Axelsson,1,2 Christina Cliffordson,2 Bo Lundbäck,1 Jan Lötvall11Krefting Research Ce...
Abstract: The current study explores whether cognitive and emotional representations of asthma are a...
(1) Background: Medication adherence is a key determinant of patient health outcomes in chronic illn...
Background: Beliefs play a crucial role in medication adherence. Interestingly, the relationship bet...
In this thesis we aimed to further deepen knowledge on factors associated with nonadherence to provi...
MNA Van Steenis,1 JA Driesenaar,2 JM Bensing,2,3 R Van Hulten,4 PC Souverein,4 L Van Dijk,2,4 PAGM D...
Contains fulltext : 53471.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
Objective: The aim was to better understand how beliefs influence medication adherence in asthma. Me...
Purpose: Patients’ decisions about whether or not to adhere to their prescribed regimens are shaped ...
Publisher Copyright: © 2017 The Author(s). Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reser...
We thank the study participants whose data were used in this analysis. Medical writing support in th...
Objectives: The objective of study is to estimate the role of counseling on the diseased patients wi...
Abstract Background The problem of nonadherence to therapy is a key reason of insufficient asthma c...
The present study was designed to evaluate the degree to which variations in reported adherence to p...
AbstractCompliance by patients to prescribed treatment regimens can be considered as the interface b...
Malin Axelsson,1,2 Christina Cliffordson,2 Bo Lundbäck,1 Jan Lötvall11Krefting Research Ce...
Abstract: The current study explores whether cognitive and emotional representations of asthma are a...
(1) Background: Medication adherence is a key determinant of patient health outcomes in chronic illn...
Background: Beliefs play a crucial role in medication adherence. Interestingly, the relationship bet...
In this thesis we aimed to further deepen knowledge on factors associated with nonadherence to provi...
MNA Van Steenis,1 JA Driesenaar,2 JM Bensing,2,3 R Van Hulten,4 PC Souverein,4 L Van Dijk,2,4 PAGM D...
Contains fulltext : 53471.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...