| Literature DB >> 32130114 |
Robert Lucero1, Renessa Williams1, Tanisia Esalomi2, Paula Alexander-Delpech2, Christa Cook3, Ragnhildur I Bjarnadottir4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HIV remains a significant health issue in the United States and disproportionately affects African Americans. African American women living with HIV (AAWH) experience a particularly high number of barriers when attempting to manage their HIV care, including antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence. To enable the development and assessment of effective interventions that address these barriers to support ART adherence, there is a critical need to understand more fully the use of objective measures of ART adherence among AAWH, including electronic medication dispensers for real-time surveillance.Entities:
Keywords: African Americans; HIV; medication adherence; medication therapy management; self-management
Year: 2020 PMID: 32130114 PMCID: PMC7057821 DOI: 10.2196/14888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Figure 1Wisepill RT2000 medication event–monitoring system.
Figure 2Wisepill medication event–monitoring system data capture and collection.
Summary of study participants’ characteristics (N=13).
| Characteristics | Values | |||
| Age (years), mean (SD), range | 48.9 (11.5), 23-63 | |||
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| Some high school (grades 9-12) | 5 (39) | ||
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| High school graduate or general education diploma | 5 (39) | ||
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| Some college or technical/trade school | 1 (8) | ||
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| College or trade school graduate | 2 (15) | ||
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| Married | 3 (23) | ||
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| Divorced | 2 (15) | ||
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| Widowed | 1 (8) | ||
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| Separated | 2 (15) | ||
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| Never married/single | 5 (39) | ||
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| Living with a long-term partner | 0 (0) | ||
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| Never | 3 (23) | |
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| Rarely | 1 (8) | |
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| About once a week | 1 (8) | |
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| A few times a week | 4 (31) | |
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| Daily | 4 (31) | |
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| Never | 5 (39) | |
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| Rarely | 5 (39) | |
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| About once a week | 1 (8) | |
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| A few times a week | 2 (15) | |
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| Daily | 0 (0) | |
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| Never | 5 (39) | |
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| Rarely | 5 (39) | |
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| About once a week | 1 (8) | |
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| A few times a week | 2 (15) | |
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| Daily | 0 (0) | |
Figure 3Uniform medication adherence.
Figure 5Nonuniform medication nonadherence.
Figure 4Nonuniform medication adherence.
Objective and subjective antiretroviral therapy adherence among a pilot sample of African American women with HIV.
| Adherence measures | Values | ||||
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| Unadjusted | 28.24 (33.33), 0-66.67 | ||
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| Adjusted | 28.24 (33.33), 0-66.67 | ||
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| Unadjusted | 70.59 (83.33), 10.00-100.00 | ||
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| Adjusted | 81.08 (86.67), 26.67-100.00 | ||
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| Overall subjective ART adherence, mean (SD), range | 77.78 (80.00), 56.67-100.00 | |||
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| Did not miss | 9 | |
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| 1 day | 2 | |
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| 2 days | 0 | |
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| 3 days | 2 | |
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| Overall adherence for item 1 (0-100), mean (median)e | 97.95 (100) | ||
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| Very poor | 0 | |
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| Poor | 0 | |
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| Fair | 4 | |
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| Good | 2 | |
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| Very good | 3 | |
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| Excellent | 4 | |
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| Overall adherence for item 2 (0-100), mean (median)e | 70.77 (80) | ||
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| Never | 1 | |
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| Rarely | 1 | |
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| Sometimes | 1 | |
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| Usually | 3 | |
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| Almost always | 5 | |
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| Always | 2 | |
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| Overall adherence for item 3 (0-100), mean (median)e | 64.62 (80) | ||
aMEMS: medication event–monitoring system.
bART: antiretroviral therapy.
cThe total number of responses for each question are based on all participants except for one who did not complete the end-of-study data collection meeting.
dThe range of responses for this question is based on the minimum and maximum missed doses reported by participants.
eWe calculated a proportion of the total number of days participants successfully took their medication in question 1 (eg, two missed doses: 28/30=98.3%). We assigned adherence in 20% increments to the response categories in questions 2 and 3 (eg, very poor=0%, poor=20%, and fair=40%).