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Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson’s disease: a focus group study

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Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson’s disease: a focus group study. / Readman, Megan Rose; Oluseye, Ayomide; Brighton, Lisa Jane et al.
In: BMC Public Health, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2879, 22.08.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Readman MR, Oluseye A, Brighton LJ, Polden M, Fairman I, Parkinson I et al. Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson’s disease: a focus group study. BMC Public Health. 2025 Aug 22;25(1):2879. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-24121-0

Author

Readman, Megan Rose ; Oluseye, Ayomide ; Brighton, Lisa Jane et al. / Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson’s disease : a focus group study. In: BMC Public Health. 2025 ; Vol. 25, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{2d5e974110164ab5932b2d119a961141,
title = "Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson{\textquoteright}s disease: a focus group study",
abstract = "Background: In England, people aged > 60 are typically required to pay for their prescriptions. Whilst exemption criteria enable people living with specified long-term health conditions to receive free prescriptions, Parkinson{\textquoteright}s disease is omitted from this list. People with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s are often reliant upon medications, and evidence suggests that medical fees can reduce quality of life and medicine adherence. We, therefore, aimed to explore the impact of prescription charges on people with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s and their family care partners (caregivers). Methods: This is a qualitative focus group study with people with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s and caregivers. Focus groups were semi-structured and conducted online. Participants were recruited through opportunity sampling. Eligible participants were adults aged 18 and over living in England who either (1) had a diagnosis of Idiopathic Parkinson{\textquoteright}s Disease or (2) provided unpaid care for someone with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s, including parents, adult children, siblings, or close friends. Data was analysed using reflexive thematic analysis within a critical realist paradigm. Results: Five focus groups were conducted with people with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s (n = 12) and caregivers (n = 12). All focus groups comprised both people with Parkinson{\textquoteright}s and caregivers. Thematic analysis identified three overarching themes: (1) The financial toll of medication and its ripple effects; (2) Lack of inclusion and support; and (3) Difficulties of seeking support. People affected by Parkinson{\textquoteright}s disagreed with current policy and suggestions of per-prescription charge re-evaluation were expressed. Conclusions: Prescription charges have multifaceted negative impacts on people affected by Parkinson{\textquoteright}s. Current prescription charge policies, including their exemption criteria, should be reviewed, alongside initiatives to raise awareness of existing financial support systems, such as pre-payment certificates. Registration: Study protocol and analysis strategy are pre-registered on Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/y8ve5/).",
keywords = "Public health, Prescriptions, Prescription charge policy, Parkinson{\textquoteright}s disease",
author = "Readman, {Megan Rose} and Ayomide Oluseye and Brighton, {Lisa Jane} and Megan Polden and Ian Fairman and Ian Parkinson and Caroline Parkinson and Clarissa Giebel",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-025-24121-0",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BMC",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding the experience of prescription charges in people living with parkinson’s disease

T2 - a focus group study

AU - Readman, Megan Rose

AU - Oluseye, Ayomide

AU - Brighton, Lisa Jane

AU - Polden, Megan

AU - Fairman, Ian

AU - Parkinson, Ian

AU - Parkinson, Caroline

AU - Giebel, Clarissa

PY - 2025/8/22

Y1 - 2025/8/22

N2 - Background: In England, people aged > 60 are typically required to pay for their prescriptions. Whilst exemption criteria enable people living with specified long-term health conditions to receive free prescriptions, Parkinson’s disease is omitted from this list. People with Parkinson’s are often reliant upon medications, and evidence suggests that medical fees can reduce quality of life and medicine adherence. We, therefore, aimed to explore the impact of prescription charges on people with Parkinson’s and their family care partners (caregivers). Methods: This is a qualitative focus group study with people with Parkinson’s and caregivers. Focus groups were semi-structured and conducted online. Participants were recruited through opportunity sampling. Eligible participants were adults aged 18 and over living in England who either (1) had a diagnosis of Idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease or (2) provided unpaid care for someone with Parkinson’s, including parents, adult children, siblings, or close friends. Data was analysed using reflexive thematic analysis within a critical realist paradigm. Results: Five focus groups were conducted with people with Parkinson’s (n = 12) and caregivers (n = 12). All focus groups comprised both people with Parkinson’s and caregivers. Thematic analysis identified three overarching themes: (1) The financial toll of medication and its ripple effects; (2) Lack of inclusion and support; and (3) Difficulties of seeking support. People affected by Parkinson’s disagreed with current policy and suggestions of per-prescription charge re-evaluation were expressed. Conclusions: Prescription charges have multifaceted negative impacts on people affected by Parkinson’s. Current prescription charge policies, including their exemption criteria, should be reviewed, alongside initiatives to raise awareness of existing financial support systems, such as pre-payment certificates. Registration: Study protocol and analysis strategy are pre-registered on Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/y8ve5/).

AB - Background: In England, people aged > 60 are typically required to pay for their prescriptions. Whilst exemption criteria enable people living with specified long-term health conditions to receive free prescriptions, Parkinson’s disease is omitted from this list. People with Parkinson’s are often reliant upon medications, and evidence suggests that medical fees can reduce quality of life and medicine adherence. We, therefore, aimed to explore the impact of prescription charges on people with Parkinson’s and their family care partners (caregivers). Methods: This is a qualitative focus group study with people with Parkinson’s and caregivers. Focus groups were semi-structured and conducted online. Participants were recruited through opportunity sampling. Eligible participants were adults aged 18 and over living in England who either (1) had a diagnosis of Idiopathic Parkinson’s Disease or (2) provided unpaid care for someone with Parkinson’s, including parents, adult children, siblings, or close friends. Data was analysed using reflexive thematic analysis within a critical realist paradigm. Results: Five focus groups were conducted with people with Parkinson’s (n = 12) and caregivers (n = 12). All focus groups comprised both people with Parkinson’s and caregivers. Thematic analysis identified three overarching themes: (1) The financial toll of medication and its ripple effects; (2) Lack of inclusion and support; and (3) Difficulties of seeking support. People affected by Parkinson’s disagreed with current policy and suggestions of per-prescription charge re-evaluation were expressed. Conclusions: Prescription charges have multifaceted negative impacts on people affected by Parkinson’s. Current prescription charge policies, including their exemption criteria, should be reviewed, alongside initiatives to raise awareness of existing financial support systems, such as pre-payment certificates. Registration: Study protocol and analysis strategy are pre-registered on Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/y8ve5/).

KW - Public health

KW - Prescriptions

KW - Prescription charge policy

KW - Parkinson’s disease

U2 - 10.1186/s12889-025-24121-0

DO - 10.1186/s12889-025-24121-0

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

IS - 1

M1 - 2879

ER -