BACKGROUND: Adherence to self-management in asthma is poor. AIM: To investigate the effect of disease-unspecific motivational training on self-management adherence in addition to asthma-specific patient education. METHODS: We randomized patients with partly controlled asthma to asthma education, with or without the Zurich Resource Model (ZRM) training. Main elements of the ZRM training are development of action-oriented personal goals and activation of resources to achieve and practice them in daily life. The primary outcome was adherence to self-monitoring and to a written personal action plan during three months. Secondary outcomes included patient-reported self-efficacy. RESULTS: As control patients (n=30) were younger, mostly male and had better asthma control compared with the intervention group (n=30), we adjusted the analyses for these imbalances. Both groups showed excellent adherence to self-monitoring over three months [27 patients (90.0%) in intervention and 25 patients (83.3%) in control group, adjusted odds ratio: 1.28 (0.24-6.78), P=0.78)]. Patients in the ZRM group tended to adjust their medication more often [median 36% days with action (IQR 11-62%)] than control patients [9% (0-43), P=0.18]. In both groups, actions were rarely in accordance with the action plan [median 20% of actions appropriate (IQR 0-37) in intervention and 11% (IQR 0-56) in control group, P=0.92]. After three months, self-efficacy was significantly better with ZRM (adjusted difference on self-efficacy scale 2.31, 95% CI 0.31-4.31, P=0.02). CONCLUSION: Unspecific self-management training had no short-term effect on self-management adherence in asthma patients. Self-efficacy improved, but it is uncertain whether this translates into better long-term outcomes.
CITATION STYLE
Steurer-Stey, C., Storch, M., Benz, S., Hobi, B., Steffen-Bürgi, B., Steurer, J., & Puhan, M. A. (2015). Motivational training improves self-efficacy but not short-term adherence with asthma self-management: a randomized controlled trial. Primary Health Care Research & Development, 16(1), 32–41. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1463423613000480
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