| Literature DB >> 22715853 |
Tracey-Lea Laba1, Jo-Anne Brien, Stephen Jan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In spite of the potential impact upon population health and expenditure, interventions promoting medication adherence have been found to be of moderate effectiveness and cost effectiveness. Understanding the relative influence of factors affecting patient medication adherence decisions and the characteristics of individuals associated with variation in adherence will lead to a better understanding of how future interventions should be designed and targeted. This study aims to explore medication-taking decisions that may underpin intentional medication non-adherence behaviour amongst a community sample and the relative importance of medication specific factors and patient background characteristics contributing to those decisions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22715853 PMCID: PMC3511288 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-13-61
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Figure 1Description of factors provided to respondents.
Figure 2Example choice question in the discrete choice experiment. This figure is representative of one choice set. The levels of each factor changes from one choice set to the next.
Respondent background characteristics
| Age, median (range), y | 59 (21–81) | 44 (18–71)* |
| Gender (male), No. (%) | 47 (42%) | 25 (50%) |
| Education, No. (%) | ||
| ≤ Year 12 or equivalent | 52 (47%) | 24 (48%) |
| > Year 12 or equivalent | 59 (53%) | 26 (52%) |
| Income (weekly $AU household, before tax), No. (%) | ||
| < $650 | 47 (42%) | 12 (24%) |
| ≥ $650 | 46 (41%) | 27 (54%) |
| Prefer not to answer | 18 (16%) | 11 (22%) |
| Health Care Concession Card Holder (yes), No. (%) | 72 (65%) | 26 (52%) |
| Private Health Insurance (yes), No. (%) | 57 (51%) | 20 (40%) |
| Number Household Dependents, No. (%) | ||
| 0 | 86 (77%) | 32 (64%) |
| ≥ 1 | 25 (23%) | 18 (36%) |
| Ever Taken Prescribed Medications (no), No. (%) | 0 (0%) | 6 (12%)* |
| Complementary/Natural Therapy Use (yes), No. (%) | 54 (49%) | 23 (46%) |
| Beliefs about Medication – general, mean (sd) | 26.9 (5.8) | 24.6 (5.4)* |
| Number of prescribed medications, median (range) | 3 (0–24) | Not Applicable |
* P<0.05 Medication users compared to non-users, χ2 test (proportions), Mann–Whitney U test (non-parametric), independent sample t-test (parametric).
Current prescribed medication use
| >6 months duration of use, (yes), No. (%) | 106 (96%) | |
| 7-day non-adherence (yes), No. (%) | 24 (22%) | |
| 12-month non-adherence, (yes), due to: | | |
| Cost No. (%) | 8 (7%) | |
| Side Effects, No. (%) | 9 (8%) | |
| Other, No. (%) | 16 (14%) | |
| 12-month non-persistence (yes), due to: | | |
| Cost, No. (%) | 12 (11%) | |
| Side Effects, No. (%) | 15 (14%) | |
| Other, No. (%) | 14 (13%) | |
Relative importance of medication harms and benefits- individual level
| Harms (overall) > Benefits (overall)b | 94 (58%) |
| Harms (immediate) > Harms (long-term)c | 86 (53%) |
| Benefits (immediate) > Benefits (long-term)d | 30 (19%) |
a Using individual parameter estimates, the relative importance of factors for medication harms and benefits was investigated using the coefficient range for each factor. The coefficient range is the difference between the smallest (negative) part worth utility and the largest part worth utility within factor levels.
b This represents the number of respondents with the sum of the coefficient ranges for the factors “severity of current side effects” and “chance of future unwanted medication effects” greater than the sum of the coefficient ranges for the factors “frequency of symptoms while on the medication (current)” and “chance of early death from the illness while on the medication (future)”.
c This represents the number of respondents with the coefficient range for the factor “severity of current side effects” greater than the coefficient range for the factor “chance of future unwanted medication effects”.
d This represents the number of respondents with the coefficient range for the factor “symptom frequency while on medication (current)” greater than the coefficient range for the factor “chance of early death from the illness while on the medication (future)”.