Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Data Core, Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Feb 14;14(2):e0212117. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212117. eCollection 2019.
To examine the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and racial and ethnic disparities in medication adherence for three widely prescribed therapeutic classes.
We linked longitudinal claims data from a large US-based insurance provider (2011-2013) to detailed SES information to identify patients treated with oral antidiabetic (N = 56,720), antihypertensive (N = 156,468) or antihyperlipidemic (N = 144,673) medications. We measured adherence and discontinuation by therapeutic class, and conducted regression analysis to quantify the contributions of different factors in the association between race/ethnicity and medication adherence.
During an average follow-up period of 2.5 years, average adherence rates of Blacks and Hispanics were at least 7.5 percentage points lower than those of Whites. Controlling for demographics, health status, out-of-pocket costs, convenience of refilling prescriptions and SES attenuated the association by 30 to 50 percent, nonetheless substantial racial disparities persisted (4.1-5.8 percentage points), particularly for asymptomatic conditions. Separating adherence among existing users from those that discontinued therapies indicates that racial/ethnic disparities in adherence reflect inconsistent pill-taking rather than differential rates of discontinuation.
Racial/ethnic disparities in adherence are mitigated, but persist after controlling for detailed socioeconomic measures. Interventions should focus more on improving medication adherence of existing users, particularly in treating asymptomatic conditions.
考察社会经济地位(SES)与药物治疗依从性种族和民族差异之间的关联,研究对象为三种广泛应用的治疗药物类别。
我们将来自一家大型美国保险公司的纵向理赔数据(2011-2013 年)与详细的 SES 信息相链接,以识别接受口服降糖药(N=56720)、抗高血压药(N=156468)或降脂药(N=144673)治疗的患者。我们根据治疗类别测量了药物的依从性和停药情况,并进行回归分析,以量化种族/民族与药物依从性之间关联中不同因素的贡献。
在平均 2.5 年的随访期间,黑人患者和西班牙裔患者的平均依从率比白人患者至少低 7.5 个百分点。在控制人口统计学、健康状况、自付费用、处方续药便利性和 SES 等因素后,这种关联降低了 30%至 50%,但仍存在显著的种族差异(4.1%-5.8%),特别是在无症状的情况下。将继续用药的患者与停药患者的依从性分开,表明药物依从性的种族/民族差异反映的是患者不规律服药,而非停药率的差异。
尽管通过控制详细的社会经济措施,种族/民族差异在药物治疗依从性方面有所缓解,但仍持续存在。干预措施应更侧重于提高现有使用者的药物治疗依从性,特别是在治疗无症状疾病方面。