Moderating Effect of Country of Residence in Predicting Adherence to Treatment Among Black Adults Diagnosed with Hypertension

E. Madu, C. Nwajiuba, Chiamaka A Madu, Tina Nweze
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Abstract

Background: Uncontrolled hypertension (HTN) is the major global risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Black individuals have worse cardiovascular health outcomes than their racial counterparts. High incidences of HTN-related strokes, heart failure, and chronic kidney diseases are prevalent in Black communities. Long-term adherence to HTN treatment is efficacious in hypertension control but challenged by psychosocial factors and the asymptomatic nature of HTN. Purpose: This research aims to assess if the country of residence moderates the relationship between adherence and each of its potential predictors in Black adults with HTN residing in the United States and Nigeria. Methodology: This is a secondary data analysis of two studies conducted in New York and southeast Nigeria (n=226). Data were analyzed using SPSS Statistical software Version 27. Descriptive differences in adherence and predicting variables, bivariate analyses for significant predicting variables within each sample, and general linear model analyses with plots for country of residence interaction effects were conducted. Results: The mean ages of the US and Nigerian samples were 57.3 ± 11.9 years (70.9% female) and 46.6 ± 8.9 years (67.1% female), respectively. Significant differences (p <.05) were noted between levels of adherence, age, self–efficacy, illness perception, annual income, and herbal use. Adherence was significantly associated (p < .05) with social support, self-efficacy, provider-patient communication, depressive symptoms, herbal use, employment, and income status within the Nigerian sample. Adherence was significantly associated with depressive symptoms and income status within the US sample. The interaction of country of residence with illness perception, social support, self-efficacy, and provider-patient communication significantly predicted adherence but not for the other variables. Interestingly, there was an opposite relationship between illness perception and adherence between the two samples. Conclusions: The country of residence moderated the relationship between adherence and illness perception, social support, self-efficacy, and provider-patient communication. These findings have clinical, cultural, and policy implications. Understanding the similarities and differences between the US and Nigeria will help clinicians working with Black patients and tailor interventions to meet the unique needs of this population. Future studies and culturally relevant strategies to improve HTN treatment adherence could target factors unique to hypertensive patients’ country of residence.
居住国家在预测黑人高血压患者治疗依从性中的调节作用
背景:未控制的高血压(HTN)是全球心血管疾病(CVD)的主要危险因素。黑人的心血管健康状况比其他种族的人更差。在黑人社区,htn相关的中风、心力衰竭和慢性肾脏疾病的发病率很高。长期坚持HTN治疗对高血压控制有效,但受到心理社会因素和HTN无症状性的挑战。目的:本研究旨在评估居住国家是否调节了居住在美国和尼日利亚的HTN黑人成人依从性及其每个潜在预测因子之间的关系。方法:这是对在纽约和尼日利亚东南部进行的两项研究(n=226)的二次数据分析。数据分析采用SPSS统计软件第27版。对依从性和预测变量的描述性差异、每个样本中显著预测变量的双变量分析以及居住国相互作用效应的一般线性模型分析进行了分析。结果:美国和尼日利亚样本的平均年龄分别为57.3±11.9岁(女性占70.9%)和46.6±8.9岁(女性占67.1%)。依从性、年龄、自我效能、疾病认知、年收入和草药使用水平之间存在显著差异(p < 0.05)。在尼日利亚样本中,依从性与社会支持、自我效能、医患沟通、抑郁症状、草药使用、就业和收入状况显著相关(p < 0.05)。在美国样本中,依从性与抑郁症状和收入状况显著相关。居住国与疾病感知、社会支持、自我效能感和医患沟通的相互作用显著预测依从性,但对其他变量没有影响。有趣的是,在两个样本之间,疾病感知和依从性之间存在相反的关系。结论:居住国调节依从性与疾病感知、社会支持、自我效能感和医患沟通的关系。这些发现具有临床、文化和政策意义。了解美国和尼日利亚之间的异同将有助于临床医生与黑人患者一起工作,并定制干预措施,以满足这一人群的独特需求。未来的研究和提高HTN治疗依从性的文化相关策略可以针对高血压患者居住国特有的因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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