Exploring the experiences of people in Ontario, Canada who have trouble affording medicines: a qualitative concept mapping study

Author:

Yaphe Hannah,Adekoya Itunuoluwa,Steiner Liane,Maraj Darshanand,O'Campo Patricia,Persaud NavORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesThe experiences of people who report cost-related medicine non-adherence are not well documented. We aimed to present experiences relating to accessing medicines reported by the participants in a randomised controlled trial of free medicine distribution.MethodsThe trial consisted of primary care patients from a large urban family practice and three rural family practices who reported cost-related medicine non-adherence. Participants were randomly allocated to continue their poor access (control) or to receive free and easily accessible medicines (intervention). As part of data collection for the first year of the trial, participants were asked closed and open-ended questions to assess their adherence to medication, health outcomes and their experiences in relation to medicine accessibility. We conducted a qualitative concept mapping study in which we analysed and summarised participants’ responses to the open-ended question on a concept map to visually present their experiences relating to accessing medicines.ResultsOf the 524 trial participants contacted, 198 (38%) responded to the open-ended question. The concept map contains clusters that represent eight types of experiences of participants related to medicine access including stress, relationship with doctor, health impact, quality of life, sacrificing other essentials, medicines are expensive, financial impact and adherence. These experiences fall under two major themes, experiences relating to personal finances and experiences relating to well-being, which are bridged by a central cluster of adherence.ConclusionsThe experiences shared by the participants demonstrate that access to medicines impacts people’s finances and well-being as well as their adherence to prescribed medicines. These results indicate that effects on personal finances and general well-being should be measured for interventions and policy changes aimed at improving medicine access.Trial registration numberThis article is linked to the Carefully Selected and Easily Accessible at No Charge Medicines (CLEAN Meds) randomised controlled trial (trial registration number: NCT02744963).

Funder

OSSU

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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