Faisal Karekoona, Tusiimire Jonans, Yadesa Tadele Mekuriya
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine, Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Mbarara, Uganda.
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, Ambo University, Ambo, Ethiopia.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2022 Feb 22;16:479-491. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S343736. eCollection 2022.
Non-adherence is a major concern in the treatment of diabetes mellitus and undermines the goals of treatment. The objective of this study was to determine the magnitude of non-adherence and its contributing factors among diabetes mellitus patients attending the diabetes mellitus clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital.
To assess prevalence and factors contributing to non-adherence to antidiabetic medication among diabetes mellitus patients in the diabetic clinic at Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital.
A descriptive cross-sectional study was adopted at the diabetes clinic, Mbarara Regional Referral Hospital, between July and October 2020. Study participants were systemically sampled, and data regarding their medication non-adherence was collected using a structured questionnaire, based on the Hill-Bone medication adherence scale. Data entry was done using Microsoft Excel Version 2010, and analysis was carried out using STATA version 13. The odds ratio was used to determine the strength of association between diabetic medication non-adherence and associated factors. The cutoff value for all statistical significance tests was set at p < 0.05 with a confidence interval of 95%.
A total of 257 participants were recruited with a 100% response rate. More than one-third (98, 38.1%) of the participants were non-adherent to their antidiabetic medication. Age above 60 years (AOR = 6.26, 95% CI = 1.009-39.241, P = 0.049) and duration of diabetes mellitus above 5 years (AOR = 1.87, 95% CI = 1.034-3.392, P = 0.038) were independently associated with non-adherence to antidiabetic medication.
The prevalence of non-adherence to antidiabetic medication was higher than that revealed in previous studies in Uganda. Patients with age above 60 years were six times more likely to be non-adherent to their anti-diabetic medications. Patient education is important to address the challenges of medication non-adherence.
治疗依从性差是糖尿病治疗中的一个主要问题,会破坏治疗目标。本研究的目的是确定姆巴拉拉地区转诊医院糖尿病门诊的糖尿病患者中治疗依从性差的程度及其影响因素。
评估姆巴拉拉地区转诊医院糖尿病门诊糖尿病患者抗糖尿病药物治疗依从性差的患病率及相关因素。
2020年7月至10月,在姆巴拉拉地区转诊医院糖尿病门诊采用描述性横断面研究。对研究参与者进行系统抽样,并根据希尔-博恩药物依从性量表,使用结构化问卷收集他们药物治疗依从性差的数据。数据录入使用Microsoft Excel 2010版本,分析使用STATA 13版本。比值比用于确定糖尿病药物治疗依从性差与相关因素之间的关联强度。所有统计学显著性检验的临界值设定为p < 0.05,置信区间为95%。
共招募了257名参与者,应答率为100%。超过三分之一(98名,38.1%)的参与者不依从抗糖尿病药物治疗。60岁以上(比值比=6.26,95%置信区间=1.009 - 39.241,P = 0.049)和糖尿病病程超过5年(比值比=1.87,95%置信区间=1.034 - 3.392,P = 0.038)与不依从抗糖尿病药物治疗独立相关。
抗糖尿病药物治疗依从性差的患病率高于乌干达先前研究中所揭示的。60岁以上的患者不依从抗糖尿病药物治疗的可能性高出六倍。患者教育对于应对药物治疗依从性差的挑战很重要。