Publication | Closed Access
Medicine Use Among the Rural Elderly
24
Citations
6
References
1985
Year
Opioid EpidemicFamily MedicineSubstance UseAgingNorthern Mississippi CountyOtc-medicine UseGeriatric MedicinePrimary CarePreventive MedicinePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchPharmaceutical CareHealth PolicyGeriatricsRural ElderlyElderly CareGeographic GridsNursingSubstance AbuseRural HealthMedicinePharmacoepidemiology
Direct and indirect relationships between predisposing, enabling and need-for-care factors and the use of prescribed and over-the-counter (OTC) medicine were examined among the rural elderly. Data were gathered through personal interviews conducted among a stratified random sample (based on geographic grids) of persons aged sixty or older residing in a northern Mississippi county. Findings showed that anxiety, perceived morbidity, and perceived availability of pharmacy services exerted direct effects on prescribed-medicine use, while several other predisposing and enabling factors exerted only indirect effects. The model derived for OTC-medicine use was much simpler: only anxiety and transportation exerted direct effects; anxiety and other predisposing variables exerted indirect effects through transportation. The model proved a better predictor of prescribedthan OTC-medicine use.
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