| Literature DB >> 27354769 |
Betsy Sleath1, Delesha M Carpenter2, Susan J Blalock2, Scott A Davis2, Ryan P Hickson2, Charles Lee3, Stefanie P Ferreri4, Jennifer E Scott5, Lisa B Rodebaugh6, Doyle M Cummings7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although there are several different general diabetes self-efficacy scales, there is a need to develop a self-efficacy scale that providers can use to assess patient's self-efficacy regarding medication use. The purpose of this study was to: 1) develop a new diabetes medication self-efficacy scale and 2) examine how diabetes medication self-efficacy is associated with patient-reported problems in using diabetes medications and self-reported adherence. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Adult English-speaking patients with type 2 diabetes were recruited from a family medicine clinic and a pharmacy in Eastern North Carolina, USA. The patients were eligible if they reported being nonadherent to their diabetes medicines on a visual analog scale. Multivariable regression was used to examine the relationship between self-efficacy and the number of reported diabetes medication problems and adherence.Entities:
Keywords: adherence; diabetes; literacy; self-efficacy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27354769 PMCID: PMC4908948 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S101349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Patient characteristics (N=51)
| Characteristics | % (n) |
|---|---|
| Sex, % (n) | |
| Male | 19.6 (10) |
| Female | 80.4 (41) |
| Race, % (n) | |
| African-American | 84.3 (43) |
| White | 15.7 (8) |
| REALM, % (n) | |
| Eighth grade or lower | 43.1 (22) |
| Ninth grade or higher | 56.9 (29) |
| PHQ-2, % (n) | |
| No depressive symptoms | 74.5 (38) |
| Depressive symptoms | 25.4 (13) |
| On oral diabetes medications | 80.4 (41) |
| On injectable diabetes medications | 50.9 (26) |
| Range (mean, standard deviation) | |
| Age | 25–75 (54.0±10.4) |
| Number of diabetes medications | 1–4 (2.1±0.9) |
| Diabetes adherence self-efficacy | 31–56 (45.4±7.5) |
| Beliefs about medications – concerns | 4–20 (12.7±4.0) |
| Beliefs about medications – benefits | 10–25 (18.7±4.3) |
| Number of diabetes medication reported problems | 0–12 (6.1±3.1) |
Abbreviations: REALM, Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine; PHQ-2, Patient Health Questionnaire-2; SD, standard deviation.
Patient responses on the diabetes medication self-efficacy scale (N=51)
| How sure are you that you can take your diabetes medicines if … | Not at all sure, % (n) | Somewhat sure, % (n) | Very sure, % (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| You are busy at home | 3.9 (2) | 35.3 (18) | 60.8 (31) |
| There is no one to remind you | 3.9 (2) | 31.4 (16) | 60.8 (31) |
| They cause some side effects | 19.6 (10) | 43.1 (22) | 35.3 (18) |
| You worry about taking them for the rest of your life | 13.7 (7) | 31.4 (16) | 52.9 (27) |
| They cost a lot of money | 31.4 (16) | 35.3 (18) | 31.4 (16) |
| You come home late from work or other activities | 23.5 (12) | 35.3 (18) | 39.2 (20) |
| You do not have any symptoms of diabetes | 17.7 (9) | 31.4 (16) | 50.9 (26) |
| You are with family members | 9.8 (5) | 27.5 (14) | 62.8 (32) |
| You are in a public place | 11.8 (6) | 25.5 (13) | 62.8 (32) |
| You feel you do not need them | 11.8 (6) | 39.2 (20) | 46.1 (24) |
| You are traveling | 7.8 (4) | 33.3 (17) | 56.9 (29) |
| You take them more than once a day | 3.9 (2) | 21.6 (11) | 72.6 (37) |
| They sometimes make you tired | 19.6 (10) | 35.3 (18) | 45.1 (23) |
| You have other medicines to take | 9.8 (5) | 17.7 (9) | 70.6 (36) |
| You feel okay | 5.9 (3) | 27.5 (14) | 66.7 (34) |
| You are shaky or jittery | 19.6 (10) | 27.5 (14) | 53.9 (27) |
| You are confused | 21.6 (11) | 37.3 (19) | 41.2 (21) |
| Your vision is blurry | 15.7 (8) | 35.3 (18) | 49.0 (25) |
| You have a headache | 15.7 (8) | 25.5 (13) | 56.9 (29) |
Multivariable linear regression results predicting the number of patient-reported problems in using their diabetes medications (N=51)
| Independent variables | |
|---|---|
| Patient race – African-American | 2.24 |
| REALM reads ninth grade or higher | −1.51 |
| PHQ-2-depressive symptoms | 0.26 |
| Beliefs about medications – concerns | 0.29 |
| Diabetes medication self-efficacy | −0.13 |
Notes:
P<0.05.
P<0.01.
Abbreviations: REALM, Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine; PHQ-2, Patient Health Questionnaire-2.
Multivariable logistic regression results predicting whether the patients scored as having high/medium adherence on the Morisky adherence scale (N=51)
| Independent variables | Patient had medium/high adherence, odds ratio (95% confidence interval) |
|---|---|
| Number of diabetes medications | 0.35 (0.13, 0.89) |
| Diabetes medication self-efficacy | 1.17 (1.05, 1.30) |
Notes:
P<0.05.
P<0.01.