Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, Oakland, CA 94612, USA.
JAMA Intern Med. 2013 Jan 14;173(1):54-61. doi: 10.1001/2013.jamainternmed.955.
The purpose of this study was to identify potential health system solutions to suboptimal use of antihypertensive therapy in a diverse cohort of patients initiating treatment.
Using a hypertension registry at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, we conducted a retrospective cohort study of 44 167 adults (age, ≥18 years) with hypertension who were new users of antihypertensive therapy in 2008. We used multivariate logistic regression analysis to model the relationships between race/ethnicity, specific health system factors, and early nonpersistence (failing to refill the first prescription within 90 days) and nonadherence (<80% of days covered during the 12 months following the start of treatment), respectively, controlling for sociodemographic and clinical risk factors.
More than 30% of patients were early nonpersistent and 1 in 5 were nonadherent to therapy. Nonwhites were more likely to exhibit both types of suboptimal medication-taking behavior compared with whites. In logistic regression models adjusted for sociodemographic, clinical, and health system factors, nonwhite race was associated with early nonpersistence (black: odds ratio, 1.56 [95% CI, 1.43-1.70]; Asian: 1.40 [1.29-1.51]; Hispanic: 1.46 [1.35-1.57]) and nonadherence (black: 1.55 [1.37-1.77]; Asian: 1.13 [1.00-1.28]; Hispanic: 1.46 [1.31-1.63]). The likelihood of early nonpersistence varied between Asians and Hispanics by choice of first-line therapy. In addition, racial and ethnic differences in nonadherence were appreciably attenuated when medication co-payment and mail-order pharmacy use were accounted for in the models.
Racial/ethnic differences in medication-taking behavior occur early in the course of treatment. However, health system strategies designed to reduce patient co-payments, ease access to medications, and optimize the choice of initial therapy may be effective tools in narrowing persistent gaps in the use of these and other clinically effective therapies.
本研究旨在确定潜在的医疗系统解决方案,以改善在接受抗高血压治疗的不同患者群体中降压治疗效果不理想的情况。
我们利用 Kaiser Permanente 北加利福尼亚的高血压登记处,对 2008 年开始使用抗高血压药物的 44167 名年龄≥18 岁的高血压成年患者进行了回顾性队列研究。我们使用多变量逻辑回归分析,分别对种族/民族、特定医疗系统因素与早期不持续(在 90 天内未再次配药)和不依从(治疗开始后 12 个月内用药天数不足 80%)之间的关系进行建模,同时控制了社会人口统计学和临床风险因素。
超过 30%的患者早期不持续用药,五分之一的患者不依从治疗。与白人相比,非白人更有可能出现这两种药物使用不佳的情况。在调整了社会人口统计学、临床和医疗系统因素的逻辑回归模型中,非白人种族与早期不持续(黑人:比值比,1.56[95%置信区间,1.43-1.70];亚裔:1.40[1.29-1.51];西班牙裔:1.46[1.35-1.57])和不依从(黑人:1.55[1.37-1.77];亚裔:1.13[1.00-1.28];西班牙裔:1.46[1.31-1.63])有关。一线治疗选择不同,亚裔和西班牙裔之间早期不持续的可能性也不同。此外,当模型中考虑药物共付额和邮购药房使用情况时,种族和民族之间不依从的差异明显减弱。
在治疗早期就出现了药物使用行为的种族/民族差异。然而,旨在降低患者共付额、增加药物获取途径和优化初始治疗选择的医疗系统策略可能是缩小这些和其他临床有效治疗方法使用方面持续差距的有效工具。