| Literature DB >> 15659883 |
Maria Deloria-Knoll1, Joan S Chmiel, Anne C Moorman, Kathy C Wood, Scott D Holmberg, Frank J Palella.
Abstract
In a confidential medication adherence questionnaire completed by 255 participants in the HIV Outpatient Study (HOPS) between March and November 1999, 33% reported skipping antiretroviral doses within the previous 3 days. The respondents, with a median age of 41, were predominantly male (86%), white (62%), and highly educated (33% had some post-high school training but no college degree and 39% had a college degree; only 11% had less than a high school diploma). Twenty-one percent had a history of injection drug use, 12% were unemployed, and 18% had Medicaid insurance. Questions about difficulty taking antiretroviral medications or drug holidays identified an additional 16% of patients experiencing adherence problems and explained significantly more of the failure to achieve undetectable viral loads than simply querying about skipped doses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15659883 DOI: 10.1089/apc.2004.18.721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Patient Care STDS ISSN: 1087-2914 Impact factor: 5.078