Crook Cara L, Margolis Seth A, Goldstein Allyson, Davis Jennifer D, Gonzalez Jeffrey S, Grant Arthur C, Nakhutina Luba
Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, 222 Richmond St., Providence, RI 02903, USA; Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI 02903, USA.
Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, 222 Richmond St., Providence, RI 02903, USA; Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI 02903, USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2023 Sep;146:109313. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2023.109313. Epub 2023 Aug 4.
Suboptimal medication adherence is common in people with epilepsy (PWE) and disproportionally prevalent among racially/ethnically diverse patients. Understanding reasons and risks of suboptimal adherence is critical to developing interventions that reduce negative health outcomes. This cross-sectional study characterized common barriers to medication self-management, prevalence of negative medication beliefs, and gaps in epilepsy knowledge among predominantly African American and Caribbean American PWE and examined their interrelationships.
Sixty-three PWE (Age = 42.1 ± 13.2; 60% female; 79% Black; 19% Hispanic/Latino) completed validated self-report questionnaires about medication self-management, medication beliefs, and epilepsy knowledge. Correlations and t-tests examined interrelationships.
Four barriers to medication self-management were common, including not taking antiseizure medications at the same time every day, forgetting doses, not planning refills before running out, and spreading out doses when running low. More than half the sample believed medications were overused by prescribers. Nearly one-third believed medications were harmful, and nearly a quarter believed their antiseizure medications were minimally necessary with almost half reporting elevated concerns about negative consequences of antiseizure medications. Poorer medication self-management was associated with stronger beliefs that medications in general are harmful/overused by prescribers. Individuals who were "accepting" of their antiseizure medications (i.e., high perceived necessity, low concerns) were less likely to spread out time between doses when running low compared to non-accepting counterparts. Knowledge gaps related to the cause of seizures/epilepsy, chronicity of epilepsy treatment, and seizure semiology/diagnosis were common. Nevertheless, epilepsy knowledge was unrelated to medication self-management and medication beliefs.
In these PWE, the most prevalent reasons for suboptimal medication self-management were behaviorally mediated and potentially modifiable. Negative medication beliefs and misconceptions about epilepsy and its treatment were common. Results further suggest that interventions addressing negative medication beliefs will be more effective than knowledge-based psychoeducation alone to improve medication self-management in this patient population.
癫痫患者(PWE)中药物依从性欠佳的情况很常见,在不同种族/民族的患者中尤为普遍。了解药物依从性欠佳的原因和风险对于制定减少负面健康结果的干预措施至关重要。这项横断面研究描述了以非裔美国人和加勒比裔美国人为主的癫痫患者在药物自我管理方面的常见障碍、负面药物信念的患病率以及癫痫知识的差距,并研究了它们之间的相互关系。
63名癫痫患者(年龄=42.1±13.2岁;60%为女性;79%为黑人;19%为西班牙裔/拉丁裔)完成了关于药物自我管理、药物信念和癫痫知识的有效自我报告问卷。相关性分析和t检验研究了它们之间的相互关系。
药物自我管理的四个常见障碍包括:没有每天在同一时间服用抗癫痫药物、忘记服药剂量、在药物用完之前没有计划补充以及药物快用完时分散服药剂量。超过一半的样本认为医生过度使用了药物。近三分之一的人认为药物有害,近四分之一的人认为他们的抗癫痫药物几乎没有必要,近一半的人表示对抗癫痫药物的负面后果深感担忧。较差的药物自我管理与更强烈地认为药物一般有害/被医生过度使用的信念有关。与不接受抗癫痫药物的患者相比,那些“接受”抗癫痫药物的患者(即认为必要性高、担忧低)在药物快用完时分散服药时间的可能性较小。与癫痫发作/癫痫的病因、癫痫治疗的长期性以及癫痫发作症状学/诊断相关的知识差距很常见。然而,癫痫知识与药物自我管理和药物信念无关。
在这些癫痫患者中,药物自我管理欠佳的最常见原因是行为介导的,并且可能是可改变的。对药物的负面信念以及对癫痫及其治疗的误解很常见。结果进一步表明,针对负面药物信念的干预措施比单纯基于知识的心理教育在改善该患者群体的药物自我管理方面更有效。