Determinants of medication adherence in patients with diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Athanasios Chantzaras, John Yfantopoulos
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Abstract

Objectives: To investigate medication non-adherence and its determinants in diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia.

Methods: In a multicenter, cross-sectional, non-interventional study, 518 diabetic, 721 hypertensive, and 463 hyperlipidemic patients were recruited, using consecutive sampling, in Greece during the COVID-19 pandemic. Medication adherence was measured with the Adherence to Refills and Medications Scale (ARMS). Multiple linear regressions with robust standard errors investigated the predictors of the ARMS summary score.

Results: Perfect adherence was estimated at 16%, 12%, and 11%, and low adherence at 38.8%, 61.3%, and 66.7% in diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia, respectively. The factors that significantly increased the likelihood of non-adherence were the following: (a) lower age, female gender, no public health insurance, high perceived threat of illness, low satisfaction with physician consultations, shorter consultations, bad general health, fewer comorbidities, and type 2 diabetes; (b) male gender, not being married, low education, no public insurance, smoking, frequent drinking, shorter consultations, self-perceived inadequacy of knowledge, negative views of medication, presence of comorbidities, fewer medicines being used, and high blood pressure in hypertension; and (c) lower age, not being employed, smoking, frequent drinking, no public insurance, low satisfaction with consultations, negative views of medication, taking 3-4 medicines, high LDL, and low HDL and triglyceride levels in hyperlipidemia. Different curvilinear associations of adherence with BMI and exercise were also found.

Conclusion: Medication non-adherence is very common in diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia. Strategies to improve adherence should consider the different determinants of non-adherence among patient groups.

糖尿病、高血压和高脂血症患者药物依从性的决定因素。
目的:探讨糖尿病、高血压和高脂血症患者的药物依从性及其影响因素。方法:在一项多中心、横断面、非介入性研究中,在希腊招募了518名糖尿病患者、721名高血压患者和463名高脂血症患者,采用连续抽样方法,在COVID-19大流行期间。药物依从性采用药物补充依从性量表(ARMS)进行测量。具有稳健标准误差的多元线性回归研究了ARMS综合评分的预测因子。结果:糖尿病、高血压和高脂血症患者的完全依从性分别为16%、12%和11%,低依从性分别为38.8%、61.3%和66.7%。显著增加不遵医嘱可能性的因素如下:(a)年龄较低、女性、无公共医疗保险、疾病威胁高、对医生咨询满意度低、咨询时间较短、总体健康状况不佳、合并症较少和2型糖尿病;(b)男性,未婚,受教育程度低,无公共保险,吸烟,频繁饮酒,就诊时间较短,自我认知知识不足,对药物持消极看法,存在合共病,使用药物较少,高血压中高血压;(c)年龄低,未就业,吸烟,频繁饮酒,无公共保险,就诊满意度低,对药物持否定态度,服用3-4种药物,高脂血症患者LDL高,HDL和甘油三酯水平低。研究还发现,坚持服药与BMI和锻炼之间存在不同的曲线关系。结论:在糖尿病、高血压、高脂血症患者中,药物不依从是很常见的。提高依从性的策略应考虑患者群体中不依从性的不同决定因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
76
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Hormones-International Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism is an international journal published quarterly with an international editorial board aiming at providing a forum covering all fields of endocrinology and metabolic disorders such as disruption of glucose homeostasis (diabetes mellitus), impaired homeostasis of plasma lipids (dyslipidemia), the disorder of bone metabolism (osteoporosis), disturbances of endocrine function and reproductive capacity of women and men. Hormones-International Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism particularly encourages clinical, translational and basic science submissions in the areas of endocrine cancers, nutrition, obesity and metabolic disorders, quality of life of endocrine diseases, epidemiology of endocrine and metabolic disorders.
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