| Literature DB >> 27512654 |
Mohammed M M Al-Haj Mohd1, Hai Phung2, Jing Sun2, Donald E Morisky3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a chronic medical condition and adherence to medication in adults with diabetes is important. Identifying predictors to medication adherence in adults with diabetes would help identify vulnerable patients who are likely to benefit by improving their adherence levels.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Diabetes; Medication
Year: 2016 PMID: 27512654 PMCID: PMC4979137 DOI: 10.1186/s40200-016-0254-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Metab Disord ISSN: 2251-6581
The 8 questions asked to determine medication adherence based on the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale
| Item | Answer | Number | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Do you sometimes forget to take your diabetes pills? | Yes | 176 | 39.5 % |
| No | 270 | 60.5 % | |
| People sometimes miss taking their medications for reasons other than forgetting. Thinking over the past two weeks, were there any days when you did not take your Diabetes medicine? | Yes | 169 | 37.9 % |
| No | 277 | 62.1 % | |
| Have you ever cut back or stopped taking your medication without telling your doctor, because you felt worse when you took it? | Yes | 149 | 33.4 % |
| No | 297 | 66.6 % | |
| When you travel or leave home, do you sometimes forget to bring along your Diabetes medication? | Yes | 220 | 49.3 % |
| No | 226 | 50.7 % | |
| Did you take your Diabetes medicine yesterday? | No | 388 | 87.0 % |
| Yes | 58 | 13.0 % | |
| When you feel like your diabetes is under control, do you sometimes stop taking your medicine? | Yes | 261 | 58.5 % |
| No | 185 | 41.5 % | |
| Taking medication everyday is a real inconvenience for some people. Do you ever feel hassled about sticking to your diabetes treatment plan? | Yes | 204 | 45.7 % |
| No | 242 | 54.3 % | |
| How often do you have difficulty remembering to take all of your medicine? | Never/rarely | 50 | 11.2 % |
| Once in a while | 69 | 15.5 % | |
| Sometimes | 96 | 21.5 % | |
| Usually | 101 | 22.6 % | |
| All the time | 130 | 29.1 % |
Self-reported medication adherence behaviour of study participants as determined by the Morisky 8-Item Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-8©)
| Age (mean +/− std) | 61 +/− 11 | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | Female | 51.6 % (230) |
| Male | 48.4 %(216) | |
| Ethnicity | Arab Emarati | 56.1 % (250) |
| Arab Non-Emarati | 38.1 % (170) | |
| Asian | 5.8 % (26) | |
| HbA1c baseline (mean +/− std) | 8.50 +/− 0.07 | |
| SBP at baseline (mean +/− std) | 133 +/− 26 | |
| DBP at baseline (mean +/− std) | 72 +/− 21 | |
| HDL at baseline (mean +/− std) | 54 +/− 11 | |
| LDL at baseline (mean +/− std) | 129 +/− 37 | |
| TGL at baseline (mean +/− std) | 212 +/− 42 | |
| Anti-Diabetic therapy | Monotherapy | 29.4 % (131) |
| Combination | 70.6 % (315) | |
| Insulin use | Yes | 50.2 % (224) |
| No | 49.8 % (222) | |
| Prescence of chronic conditions | Yes | 54.0 % (224) |
| No | 46.0 % (205) | |
Fig. 1Reported adherence rates in total study population
Adherence levels differed significantly with the patients gender and ethnic group
| Adherence level | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low adherence (MMAS-8 < 6) | Medium adherence (MMAS-8 = 6 to <8) | High adherence (MMAS-8 = 8) | |||||
| Row % | N | Row % | n | Row % | n | ||
| Gender | Female | 57.8 % | 133a | 28.7 % | 66a | 13.5 % | 31b |
| Male | 71.8 % | 155a | 24.1 % | 52a | 4.2 % | 9b | |
| Ethnicity | Arab Emarati | 81.6 % | 204a | 15.6 % | 39b | 2.8 % | 7b |
| Arab Non-Emarati | 47.1 % | 80a | 38.2 % | 65b | 14.7 % | 25b | |
| Asian | 15.4 % | 4a | 53.8 % | 14b | 30.8 % | 8b | |
Note: Values in the same row and sub-table not sharing the same subscript are significantly different at p < .05 in the two-sided test of equality for column proportions. Cells with no subscript are not included in the test
Cultural variables in relation to adherence levels
| Adherence level | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low adherence (MMAS-8 < 6) | Medium adherence (MMAS-8 = 6 to 7) | High adherence (MMAS-8 = 8) | |||||
| n | Column % | n | Column % | n | Column % | ||
| What do you mostly wear? | Shirt, trousers, shorts, skirt. | 70a | 24.3 % | 95b | 80.5 % | 17c | 42.5 % |
| Dishdasha/Abaya/Kandoura/Jelbab | 218a | 75.7 % | 23b | 19.5 % | 23c | 57.5 % | |
| Do you alter your medication in Ramadan under the guidance of your doctor? | Yes | 23a | 8.0 % | 55b | 46.6 % | 27b | 67.5 % |
| No | 265a | 92.0 % | 63b | 53.4 % | 13b | 32.5 % | |
| Do you notice any changes in your weight? | Yes | 43a | 14.9 % | 44b | 37.3 % | 28c | 70.0 % |
| No | 245a | 85.1 % | 74b | 62.7 % | 12c | 30.0 % | |
| Do you gain or lose weight in Ramadan? | Lose weight | 40a | 13.9 % | 44b | 37.3 % | 20b | 50.0 % |
| Stay the same | 7a | 2.4 % | 17b | 14.4 % | 7b | 17.5 % | |
| Gain weight | 241a | 83.7 % | 57b | 48.3 % | 13b | 32.5 % | |
| Do you see plumpness as a sign of beauty? | Yes | 150a | 52.1 % | 52a | 44.1 % | 15a | 37.5 % |
| No | 138a | 47.9 % | 66a | 55.9 % | 25a | 62.5 % | |
| Do you find hot weather (Summer) a challenge to exercise? | Yes | 254a | 88.2 % | 47b | 39.8 % | 19b | 47.5 % |
| No | 34a | 11.8 % | 71b | 60.2 % | 21b | 52.5 % | |
Note: Values in the same row and sub-table not sharing the same subscript are significantly different at p < .05 in the two-sided test of equality for column proportions. Cells with no subscript are not included in the test. Tests assume equal variances1
1. Tests are adjusted for all pairwise comparisons within a row of each innermost sub-table using the Bonferroni correction
Condition and therapy variables against different reported adherence levels
| Adherence level | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low adherence (MMAS-8 < 6) | Medium adherence (MMAS-8 = 6 to 7) | High adherence (MMAS-8 = 8) | |||||
| n | Column % | n | Column % | n | Column % | ||
| Anti-diabetic therapy | Monotherapy | 92a | 31.9 % | 12b | 10.2 % | 27c | 67.5 % |
| Combination | 196a | 68.1 % | 106b | 89.8 % | 13c | 32.5 % | |
| Insulin use | Yes | 169a | 58.7 % | 44b | 37.3 % | 11b | 27.5 % |
| No | 119a | 41.3 % | 74b | 62.7 % | 29b | 72.5 % | |
| Presence of chronic conditions | Yes | 135a | 46.9 % | 76b | 64.4 % | 30b | 75.0 % |
| No | 153a | 53.1 % | 42b | 35.6 % | 10b | 25.0 % | |
Note: Values in the same row and sub-table not sharing the same subscript are significantly different at p < .05 in the two-sided test of equality for column proportions
Significant predictors to adherence after multi-logistic regression modelling
| p-value | Odds ratio | 95 % C.I. for OR | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | |||
| Age | .001 | 1.113 | 1.045 | 1.185 |
| Duration of diabetes/years | .001 | 1.830 | 1.270 | 2.636 |
| Arab Non-Emarati ethnicity | .003 | 8.830 | 2.052 | 37.995 |
| Asian ethnicity | .019 | 39.400 | 1.819 | 853.457 |
| Technical diploma | .000 | 66.076 | 6.925 | 630.433 |
| University degree | .013 | 19.596 | 1.872 | 205.130 |
| Insulin use | .014 | .188 | .050 | .709 |
| Traditional dress code | .000 | .010 | .002 | .071 |
| Alteration of diabetes Meds under GP guidance during Ramadan | .000 | 62.675 | 9.324 | 421.286 |
| Attention to weight change | .004 | 7.965 | 1.971 | 32.180 |
| No change in weight in Ramadan | .050 | 14.112 | .995 | 200.233 |
| Difficulty to exercise in summer | .022 | .170 | .037 | .777 |
Fig. 2Multi-variate logistic regression of predictors to medication adherence