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Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey

BACKGROUND: Although hypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, adherence to hypertensive medications is low. Previous research identifying factors influencing adherence has focused primarily on broad, population-based approaches. Identifying specific barriers for an individual...

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Autores principales: Nair, Kavita V, Belletti, Daniel A, Doyle, Joseph J, Allen, Richard R, McQueen, Robert B, Saseen, Joseph J, Vande Griend, Joseph, Patel, Jay V, McQueen, Angela, Jan, Saira
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3090381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21573051
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S18481
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author Nair, Kavita V
Belletti, Daniel A
Doyle, Joseph J
Allen, Richard R
McQueen, Robert B
Saseen, Joseph J
Vande Griend, Joseph
Patel, Jay V
McQueen, Angela
Jan, Saira
author_facet Nair, Kavita V
Belletti, Daniel A
Doyle, Joseph J
Allen, Richard R
McQueen, Robert B
Saseen, Joseph J
Vande Griend, Joseph
Patel, Jay V
McQueen, Angela
Jan, Saira
author_sort Nair, Kavita V
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although hypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, adherence to hypertensive medications is low. Previous research identifying factors influencing adherence has focused primarily on broad, population-based approaches. Identifying specific barriers for an individual is more useful in designing meaningful targeted interventions. Using customized telephonic outreach, we examined specific patient-reported barriers influencing hypertensive patients’ nonadherence to medication in order to identify targeted interventions. METHODS: A telephone survey of 8692 nonadherent hypertensive patients was conducted. The patient sample comprised health plan members with at least two prescriptions for antihypertensive medications in 2008. The telephone script was based on the “target” drug associated with greatest nonadherence (medication possession ratio [MPR] <80%) during the four-month period preceding the survey. RESULTS: The response rate was 28.2% of the total sample, representing 63.8% of commercial members and 37.2% of Medicare members. Mean age was 63.4 years. Mean MPR was 61.0% for the target drug. Only 58.2% of Medicare respondents and 60.4% of commercial respondents reported “missing a dose of medication”. The primary reason given was “forgetfulness” (61.8% Medicare, 60.8% commercial), followed by “being too busy” (2.7% Medicare, 18.5% commercial) and “other reasons” (21.9% Medicare, 8.1% commercial) including travel, hospitalization/sickness, disruption of daily events, and inability to get to the pharmacy. Prescription copay was a barrier for less than 5% of surveyed patients. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that events interfering with daily routine had a significant impact on adherence. Medication adherence appears to be a patterned behavior established through the creation of a routine and a reminder system for taking the medication. Providers should assess patients’ daily schedules and medication-taking competency to develop and promote a medication routine.
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spelling pubmed-30903812011-05-13 Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey Nair, Kavita V Belletti, Daniel A Doyle, Joseph J Allen, Richard R McQueen, Robert B Saseen, Joseph J Vande Griend, Joseph Patel, Jay V McQueen, Angela Jan, Saira Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research BACKGROUND: Although hypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, adherence to hypertensive medications is low. Previous research identifying factors influencing adherence has focused primarily on broad, population-based approaches. Identifying specific barriers for an individual is more useful in designing meaningful targeted interventions. Using customized telephonic outreach, we examined specific patient-reported barriers influencing hypertensive patients’ nonadherence to medication in order to identify targeted interventions. METHODS: A telephone survey of 8692 nonadherent hypertensive patients was conducted. The patient sample comprised health plan members with at least two prescriptions for antihypertensive medications in 2008. The telephone script was based on the “target” drug associated with greatest nonadherence (medication possession ratio [MPR] <80%) during the four-month period preceding the survey. RESULTS: The response rate was 28.2% of the total sample, representing 63.8% of commercial members and 37.2% of Medicare members. Mean age was 63.4 years. Mean MPR was 61.0% for the target drug. Only 58.2% of Medicare respondents and 60.4% of commercial respondents reported “missing a dose of medication”. The primary reason given was “forgetfulness” (61.8% Medicare, 60.8% commercial), followed by “being too busy” (2.7% Medicare, 18.5% commercial) and “other reasons” (21.9% Medicare, 8.1% commercial) including travel, hospitalization/sickness, disruption of daily events, and inability to get to the pharmacy. Prescription copay was a barrier for less than 5% of surveyed patients. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that events interfering with daily routine had a significant impact on adherence. Medication adherence appears to be a patterned behavior established through the creation of a routine and a reminder system for taking the medication. Providers should assess patients’ daily schedules and medication-taking competency to develop and promote a medication routine. Dove Medical Press 2011-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3090381/ /pubmed/21573051 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S18481 Text en © 2011 Nair et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Nair, Kavita V
Belletti, Daniel A
Doyle, Joseph J
Allen, Richard R
McQueen, Robert B
Saseen, Joseph J
Vande Griend, Joseph
Patel, Jay V
McQueen, Angela
Jan, Saira
Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title_full Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title_fullStr Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title_full_unstemmed Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title_short Understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
title_sort understanding barriers to medication adherence in the hypertensive population by evaluating responses to a telephone survey
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3090381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21573051
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S18481
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