| Literature DB >> 20883231 |
Michelle Y Martin1, Connie Kohler, Young-il Kim, Polly Kratt, Yu-Mei Schoenberger, Mark S Litaker, Heather M Prayor-Patterson, Stephen J Clarke, Shiquina Andrews, Maria Pisu.
Abstract
Control of hypertension remains poor, and lack of adherence to medication is considered a primary reason. Few studies have examined the reasons for medication nonadherence in African American, lower-income, rural adults receiving medications at no personal cost. Moreover, our understanding of how the provider-patient relationship influences adherence in this population is limited. In this study, the authors (1) examined reasons for taking less medication than prescribed and (2) examined the association between provider-patient variables and medication adherence. A total of 434 participants (94.8% African American) were included. The most frequently endorsed reasons for taking less medication than prescribed were not having blood pressure medicine when it was time to take a dose (36%), running out of medicine (35%), bothered by side effects (29%), and a change in one's daily routine (27%). Nonadherent individuals were significantly more likely to report discomfort with asking the health provider questions (74% vs 63%), were more likely to report that health care visits were stressful (25% vs 16%), and exhibited more depressive symptoms (58% vs 45%). Adherent patients had lower blood pressure (systolic: 133±15.8 mm Hg vs 138±17.6 mm Hg, P value=.002; diastolic: 80±9.8 mm Hg vs 83±11 mm Hg, P value=.003) than individuals who were less adherent. Clinicians providing care to rural, poor hypertensive patients should routinely assess self-management behaviors, logistical barriers, and emotional health. Creating clinical encounters that minimize the stressful nature of the visit and encourage patient question-asking behavior may also be important for the optimal management of hypertension.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20883231 PMCID: PMC3241438 DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-7176.2010.00321.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) ISSN: 1524-6175 Impact factor: 3.738