Crowley Matthew J, Zullig Leah L, Shah Bimal R, Shaw Ryan J, Lindquist Jennifer H, Peterson Eric D, Bosworth Hayden B
Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Durham VA Medical Center, HSR&D (152), 508 Fulton Street, Durham, NC, 27705, USA,
J Gen Intern Med. 2015 Jan;30(1):83-90. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-3072-x.
Medication non-adherence is a major impediment to the management of cardiovascular disease risk factors. A better understanding of the modifying factors underlying medication non-adherence among individuals with known cardiovascular disease may inform approaches for addressing non-adherence.
The purpose of this study was to identify demographic and patient characteristics, medical comorbidities, psychosocial factors, and health belief-related factors associated with medication non-adherence among patients with known cardiovascular disease.
We performed secondary analysis of baseline data from a randomized trial.
The study included 405 patients with a diagnosis of hypertension and history of acute myocardial infarction that was diagnosed within a three-year period prior to enrollment.
Baseline demographics and patient characteristics, medical comorbidities, psychosocial factors, health belief-related factors, and patient-reported medication non-adherence were analyzed.
Of 405 patients, 173 (42.7 %) reported medication non-adherence. Factors associated with non-adherence in bivariate analysis included younger age, non-white race, having less than 12 years of education, smoking, financial insecurity, identifying as nervous or tense, higher life chaos score, greater worry about having a myocardial infarction, and greater worry about having a stroke. Using multivariable modeling, we determined that age (OR 0.97 per additional year, 95 % CI, 0.95-0.99), life chaos (OR 1.06 per additional point, 95 % CI, 1.00-1.11), and worry about stroke (OR 1.12 per additional point, 95 % CI, 1.01-1.25) remained significantly associated with self-reported medication non-adherence.
We found that worry about having a stroke, higher life chaos, and younger age were all significantly associated with self-reported medication non-adherence in patients with cardiovascular disease and a history of myocardial infarction. Further research exploring these factors as targets for intervention is needed, as is additional research examining modifiable causes of medication non-adherence among patients with cardiovascular disease.
药物治疗依从性不佳是心血管疾病危险因素管理的主要障碍。更好地了解已知心血管疾病患者中药物治疗依从性不佳的潜在影响因素,可能为解决依从性问题提供方法。
本研究旨在确定已知心血管疾病患者中与药物治疗依从性不佳相关的人口统计学和患者特征、合并症、心理社会因素以及健康信念相关因素。
我们对一项随机试验的基线数据进行了二次分析。
该研究纳入了405例诊断为高血压且在入组前三年内被诊断为急性心肌梗死的患者。
分析了基线人口统计学和患者特征、合并症、心理社会因素、健康信念相关因素以及患者报告的药物治疗依从性不佳情况。
在405例患者中,173例(42.7%)报告存在药物治疗依从性不佳。二元分析中与依从性不佳相关的因素包括年龄较小、非白人种族、受教育年限不足12年、吸烟、经济不安全、自认为紧张或焦虑、生活混乱得分较高、对心肌梗死的担忧较大以及对中风的担忧较大。使用多变量模型,我们确定年龄(每增加一岁,OR为0.97,95%CI为0.95 - 0.99)、生活混乱(每增加一分,OR为1.06,95%CI为1.00 - 1.11)以及对中风的担忧(每增加一分,OR为1.12,95%CI为1.01 - 1.25)仍与自我报告的药物治疗依从性不佳显著相关。
我们发现,对中风的担忧、较高的生活混乱程度以及较年轻的年龄均与有心血管疾病和心肌梗死病史患者自我报告的药物治疗依从性不佳显著相关。需要进一步研究将这些因素作为干预目标,还需要更多研究探讨心血管疾病患者药物治疗依从性不佳的可改变原因。