29 research outputs found

    A Comparison of Objectively- and Subjectively-Measured Adherence in Glaucoma Patients of African Descent

    Get PDF
    poster abstractPurpose. Adherence to medical treatment of glaucoma is challenging. People of African descent (AD) have higher prevalence of open-angle glaucoma (OAG) and have been shown to have worse adherence. The goal of this prospective, observational study was to compare objectively- and subjectively-measured adherence in patients of African descent and to determine their relationship with self-efficacy. Methods. Twenty-one patients of AD diagnosed with OAG in the past five years were included in this study. Patients used a once-daily topical prostaglandin analog eye drop and self-administered their medication. Subjective adherence was assessed through self-report. Adherence was objectively measured using MEMS bottles. The cap of these bottles records the number of times the bottle is opened. Self-efficacy was assessed using the 10-item Glaucoma Medication Self-Efficacy scale and the 6-item Eye Drop Technique Self-Efficacy scale. MEMS adherence percentages were compared to self-reported adherence using a paired sample two-tailed t-test. To assess the relationship between objectively measured adherence and self-efficacy, patients were divided into 3 groups (n=7 each): high, medium and low adherence groups. The Chi-square test was used to determine whether differences in self-efficacy between the groups were present for each question on the two self-efficacy scales. Results. Subjectiveadherence (mean ± standard deviation) (97.34% ± 5.61) was significantly higher than objective adherence (66.34% ± 26.68) (p= 0.01). Of the 21 patients, 17 self-reported higher adherence levels than MEMS adherence levels. 4 patients with the highest levels of objectively measured adherence were the only patients to correctly estimate their adherence by self-report. Only one question was significantly associated with objective adherence: patients with high adherence were significantly more confident about taking their glaucoma medications when they do not experience symptoms (p = 0.04). Conclusions. Results showed that patients with higher adherence are more confident about using their eye drops in the absence of symptoms

    Schrödinger’s Mouse: Liminality and the ΛΙΜΝΗ in the Batrachomyomachia

    No full text
    Abstract This article argues that the ambiguity over whether certain characters are alive or dead during the second half of the Batrachomyomachia is not only deliberate, as previous scholars have suggested, but part of a complex intertextual relationship with Iliad 21 and Achilles’ battle in the Scamander. It concludes by suggesting that the poet's decision to stage this new battle in a ƛίμνη, a pool or pond, helps to articulate the ideas of life, death and resurrection which characterize this section of the poem.</jats:p

    “But who art thou?”: Callimachus and the unsatisfactory epitaph

    No full text
    Callimachus’ Anth.Pal. 7.522, by withholding from the passer-by any effective information about the dead, is consistent with the bleak sequence 517-525, whose theme is the vacuity of any afterlife

    Schrödinger’s Mouse: Liminality and the ΛΙΜΝΗ in the Batrachomyomachia

    No full text
    Abstract This article argues that the ambiguity over whether certain characters are alive or dead during the second half of the Batrachomyomachia is not only deliberate, as previous scholars have suggested, but part of a complex intertextual relationship with Iliad 21 and Achilles’ battle in the Scamander. It concludes by suggesting that the poet's decision to stage this new battle in a ƛίμνη, a pool or pond, helps to articulate the ideas of life, death and resurrection which characterize this section of the poem.</jats:p
    corecore