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The influence of personal communities on the self-management of medication taking: a wider exploration of medicine work

The influence of personal communities on the self-management of medication taking: a wider exploration of medicine work
The influence of personal communities on the self-management of medication taking: a wider exploration of medicine work
Objectives There is a lack of focus on the broader social context, networks and influences on medicine-taking as part of illness work. This work adopts a social network approach and seeks to explicate the nature of medicine-taking work that people with multiple long-term conditions (LTCs) and their social network members (SNMs) do in attempting to take their medications on a daily basis, the division of labour amongst these members and when and why SNMs become involved in that work.

Methods Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 20 people who had multiple LTCs. Medication networks were constructed and the division of labour in relation to medication-work was explored.

Results Four types of medication-work emerged: medication articulation, surveillance, emotional and informational. Involvement of SNMs in medication-work was selective, performed primarily by family members, within the home. Involvement reflected network composition and/or an individual’s conceptualisation/presentation of self.

Discussion Our findings support and extend the conceptualisation of routine medicine-taking as a type of work. Furthermore, we illustrate the involvement of SNMs in aspects of medicine-work. Health professionals should explore and support the role of SNMs in medicine-taking where possible. Future research should explore the implications of network types and compositions on medicine-taking and associated work.

multimorbidity, long-term conditions, adherence, illness work, social network
1742-3953
Cheraghi-Sohi, S.
6357aeb4-ee87-4c15-aee2-594d243a4059
Jeffries, M.
ae1aced3-0323-4b35-b6f4-c5ff33bddf83
Stevenson, F.
fc6cfcf2-9b3d-4735-893a-e71f117b9975
Ashcroft, D.M.
4c216a75-39c1-49d4-b2a8-d65368f74242
Carr, M.
5821c20e-1c82-4c95-9ba7-f3b1d7d41db0
Oliver, K.
4c47a490-bf84-4f76-808c-989e46e24ec0
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Cheraghi-Sohi, S.
6357aeb4-ee87-4c15-aee2-594d243a4059
Jeffries, M.
ae1aced3-0323-4b35-b6f4-c5ff33bddf83
Stevenson, F.
fc6cfcf2-9b3d-4735-893a-e71f117b9975
Ashcroft, D.M.
4c216a75-39c1-49d4-b2a8-d65368f74242
Carr, M.
5821c20e-1c82-4c95-9ba7-f3b1d7d41db0
Oliver, K.
4c47a490-bf84-4f76-808c-989e46e24ec0
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7

Cheraghi-Sohi, S., Jeffries, M., Stevenson, F., Ashcroft, D.M., Carr, M., Oliver, K. and Rogers, Anne (2014) The influence of personal communities on the self-management of medication taking: a wider exploration of medicine work. Chronic Illness. (doi:10.1177/1742395314537841).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives There is a lack of focus on the broader social context, networks and influences on medicine-taking as part of illness work. This work adopts a social network approach and seeks to explicate the nature of medicine-taking work that people with multiple long-term conditions (LTCs) and their social network members (SNMs) do in attempting to take their medications on a daily basis, the division of labour amongst these members and when and why SNMs become involved in that work.

Methods Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 20 people who had multiple LTCs. Medication networks were constructed and the division of labour in relation to medication-work was explored.

Results Four types of medication-work emerged: medication articulation, surveillance, emotional and informational. Involvement of SNMs in medication-work was selective, performed primarily by family members, within the home. Involvement reflected network composition and/or an individual’s conceptualisation/presentation of self.

Discussion Our findings support and extend the conceptualisation of routine medicine-taking as a type of work. Furthermore, we illustrate the involvement of SNMs in aspects of medicine-work. Health professionals should explore and support the role of SNMs in medicine-taking where possible. Future research should explore the implications of network types and compositions on medicine-taking and associated work.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2014
Published date: 11 June 2014
Keywords: multimorbidity, long-term conditions, adherence, illness work, social network
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 365909
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/365909
ISSN: 1742-3953
PURE UUID: 87b51b06-fb36-464a-a228-59acc3f3ef45

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2014 09:22
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:02

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Contributors

Author: S. Cheraghi-Sohi
Author: M. Jeffries
Author: F. Stevenson
Author: D.M. Ashcroft
Author: M. Carr
Author: K. Oliver
Author: Anne Rogers

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