| Literature DB >> 29625571 |
Neda Ratanawongsa1, Judy Quan2, Margaret A Handley2,3, Urmimala Sarkar2, Dean Schillinger2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinicians have difficulty accurately assessing medication non-adherence within chronic disease care settings. Health information technology (HIT) could offer novel tools to assess medication adherence in diverse populations outside of usual health care settings. In a multilingual urban safety net population, we examined the validity of assessing adherence using automated telephone self-management (ATSM) queries, when compared with non-adherence using continuous medication gap (CMG) on pharmacy claims. We hypothesized that patients reporting greater days of missed pills to ATSM queries would have higher rates of non-adherence as measured by CMG, and that ATSM adherence assessments would perform as well as structured interview assessments.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Health disparities; Health information technology; Limited English proficiency; Limited health literacy; Managed care; Medicaid; Medication adherence; Safety net clinics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29625571 PMCID: PMC5889590 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3071-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Baseline sociodemographic and medical characteristics of health plan members receiving a language-concordant automated telephone self-management / health coaching diabetes intervention (N = 210)
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 56.0 (6.8) |
| Women, n (%) | 157 (74.8) |
| Race/ethnicity, n (%) | |
| Latino | 44 (20.1) |
| Black / African-American | 12 (5.7) |
| Asian / Pacific Islander | 135 (64.3) |
| White / Caucasian | 14 (6.7) |
| Multi-Ethnic / Other | 5 (2.4) |
| Born outside the U.S., n (%) | 23 (11.0) |
| Language, n (%) | |
| Cantonese-speaking | 120 (57.1) |
| Spanish-speaking | 39 (18.6) |
| Language-concordant primary care provider | 55 (34.6) |
| Educational attainment, n (%) | |
| 8th grade education or less | 90 (42.9) |
| Some high school | 21 (10.0) |
| High school graduate or GED | 49 (23.3) |
| College graduate or above | 50 (23.8) |
| Limited health literacy, n (%) | 97 (46.4) |
| Employment status, n (%) | |
| Employed full-time | 51 (24.3) |
| Part-time | 98 (46.7) |
| Unemployed | 24 (11.4) |
| Disabled | 14 (6.7) |
| Homemaker / Retired / Other | 23 (11.0) |
| Annual household income, n (%) | |
| ≤ $20,000 | 124 (62.6) |
| $20,001–30,000 | 38 (19.2) |
| > $30,000 | 36 (18.2) |
| Insurance type, n (%) | |
| Medicaid | 44 (21.0) |
| Uninsured/Commercial | 2 (1.0) |
| Healthy Worker/Healthy San Francisco | 164 (78.1) |
| Years diagnosed with diabetes, mean (SD) | 7.1 (5.5) |
| Insulin treatment, n (%) | 43 (20.5) |
| Hemoglobin A1c > 8.0%, n (%) | 51 (25.5) |
| Hemoglobin A1c, mean (SD) | 7.7 (1.5) |
| Systolic blood pressure, mean mm Hg (SD) | 126.2 (16.3) |
| Low-density lipoprotein, mean mg/dL (SD) | 87.3 (26.8) |
Mean continuous medication gap (CMG) and prevalence of optimal medication adherence (CMG ≤ 20%) among health plan members receiving automated telephone self-management / health coaching diabetes intervention
| First Completed ATSM | Baseline Interview | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medication | Number | Mean CMG (SD) | Optimal Adherence | Number | Mean CMG (SD) | Optimal Adherence |
| Diabetic pill | 170 | 0.08 (0.13) | 83.5% | 178 | 0.08 (0.14) | 82.6% |
| Blood pressure pill | 113 | 0.06 (0.12) | 91.1% | 125 | 0.06 (0.11) | 91.4% |
| Cholesterol pill | 115 | 0.09 (0.14) | 85.2% | 130 | 0.08 (0.12) | 86.9% |
Fig. 1Proportions of automated telephone self-management (ATSM) query respondents who had optimal adherence, suboptimal adherence, or non-calculable continuous medication gap. * p-value is for the comparison between optimal and suboptimal adherence
Fig. 2Proportions of interview respondents who had optimal adherence, suboptimal adherence, or non-calculable continuous medication gap. * p-value is for the comparison between optimal and suboptimal adherence
Concordance of reports of missed medication days between ATSM and interview responses among health plan members receiving automated telephone self-management / health coaching diabetes intervention
| Diabetes pill ( | Blood pressure pill ( | Cholesterol pill ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concordant | 71.4% | 72.5% | 54.6% |
| Higher disclosure on interview | 11.9% | 21.6% | 14.5% |
| Higher disclosure on ATSM | 16.7% | 5.9% | 30.9% |