Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
879469 | Current Opinion in Psychology | 2015 | 6 Pages |
•Burden associated with chronic care management may undermine treatment adherence.•Treatment fatigue may index when patient demands exceed coping capacity.•Treatments should aim to minimize treatment burden and increase patient capacity.•Technological innovations offer promising tools to reduce patient burden.•Additional research is needed to better understand treatment burden and fatigue.
Effective management of chronic diseases involves sustained changes in health behavior, which often requires substantial effort and patient burden. As treatment burden is associated with reduced adherence across several chronic conditions, its assessment and treatment are important clinical priorities. The balance between patient demands and capacity (e.g. coping resources) may be indexed by patients’ subjective experience of treatment fatigue. We present a modified workload–capacity model that incorporates evidence that treatment fatigue may, firstly, be caused by increased workload due to treatment burden (e.g. intensity, complications) and secondly, undermine adherence. Emerging technology-based interventions may be well-suited to reduce treatment burden, prevent treatment fatigue, and increase treatment adherence.