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老年共病患者药物治疗中的共同决策:一项现象学研究
Authors Liu YD, Zhao H, Zhang CY, Zheng YJ, Hou JN, Yang JL, Liu XY
Received 26 November 2024
Accepted for publication 4 July 2025
Published 24 July 2025 Volume 2025:19 Pages 2201—2212
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S508770
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 3
Editor who approved publication: Dr Johnny Chen
Yu-Dan Liu,1 Hua Zhao,1 Cai-Yun Zhang,2 Yu-Juan Zheng,3 Jia-Ning Hou,1 Jia-Le Yang,1 Xing-Yu Liu1
1College of Nursing, Shanxi University of Chinese Medicine, Jinzhong, 030619, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Nursing, Shanxi Provincial People’s Hospital, Taiyuan, 030000, People’s Republic of China; 3Department of Cardiology, Shanxi Provincial People’s Hospital, Taiyuan, 030000, People’s Republic of China
Correspondence: Hua Zhao, College of Nursing, Shanxi University of Chinese Medicine, Jinzhong, Shanxi, People’s Republic of China, Tel +8613903465019, Email zhshun7788@126.com
Objective: To explore the willingness, needs, and factors influencing participation in medication decision-making among elderly patients with multi-morbidities, caregivers, and healthcare professionals.
Methods: A phenomenological research method was used to conduct semi-structured interviews with elderly patients with multi-morbidities, caregivers, and healthcare professionals. The purposive sampling method was used to select geriatric patients with multi-morbidities, their caregivers, and healthcare workers from March to July 2024 in the Geriatrics, Cardiology, Endocrinology, Respiratory, and Nephrology Departments of a tertiary hospital in Shanxi Province as the study subjects. The Colaizzi 7-step analysis method was used to analyze, summarize, and refine themes from the interview data.
Results: Twelve elderly patients with multi-morbidities, nine caregivers, and seven healthcare professionals were interviewed. Three themes and nine sub-themes were identified, as follows: (1) willingness to participate in decision-making (large differences in willingness and discrepancies between willingness and reality); (2) the current status of multi-morbidity management (lack of guidelines, healthcare systems and decision-making support systems); and (3) factors influencing participation in decision-making (bias in the power structure, lack of information exchange, insufficient knowledge and awareness of shared decision-making by healthcare workers, differences in patients’ self-management initiative and medication-focused motivations).
Conclusion: Elderly patients with multi-morbidities were affected by multiple impediments to participation in medication decision-making. Healthcare professionals should continue to improve their shared decision-making awareness and ability, provide patients with targeted decision-making needs, solve decision-making problems, and promote the implementation of shared decision-making in elderly patients with multi-morbidities.
Keywords: multi-morbidity, elderly, shared decision-making, medication, patients, stakeholders, qualitative research