Affiliation:
1. National Healthcare Group Polyclinics, Singapore
Abstract
Patients with multimorbidity often undertake several tasks to manage their health. These include learning about their conditions, taking medications correctly, implementing lifestyle changes, etc., which can be overwhelming and burdensome.1 Their perceptions of the effort required to manage their health conditions and its impact on their general well-being are known as treatment burden.1 Although treatment burden is often overlooked by healthcare providers, there is growing recognition of its negative effects on medical adherence, quality of life and wasted healthcare resources.1,2 Dobbler et al.1 and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines3 have suggested incorporating treatment burden into the clinical practice guidelines recommendations to better inform clinicians of the associated benefits and burden.
Publisher
Academy of Medicine, Singapore
Reference10 articles.
1. Dobler CC, Harb N, Maguire CA, et al. Treatment burden should be included in clinical practice guidelines. BMJ 2018;363:k4065.
2. Vijan S, Hayward RA, Ronis DL, et al. Brief report: the burden of diabetes therapy: implications for the design of effective patient-centered treatment regimens. J Gen Intern Med 2005;20:479-82.
3. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Multimorbidity: clinical assessment and management (NICE, London) NG56, 21 September 2016. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng56. Accessed 17 March 2023.
4. Duncan P, Murphy M, Man MS, et al. Development and validation of the Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire (MTBQ). BMJ Open 2018;8:e019413.
5. Pedersen MH, Duncan P, Lasgaard M, et al. Danish validation of the Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire (MTBQ) and findings from a population health survey: a mixed-methods study. BMJ Open 2022;12:e055276.