| Literature DB >> 33116427 |
Carlos De Las Cuevas1,2, Jose de Leon3,4,5.
Abstract
THE PROBLEM: Poor adherence to appropriately prescribed medication is a global challenge for psychiatrists. PRIOR STUDIES: Measuring adherence is complicated. In our recent three-country naturalistic study including more than 1000 patients and their adherence to multiple medication prescriptions at the same time, patients' self-report of adherence to each specific drug was the only practical option for measuring adherence. Systematic literature reviews provide inconsistent results for sociodemographic, clinical and medication variables as predictors of adherence to psychiatric drugs. Our studies over the last 10 years in relatively stable psychiatric outpatients have shown that some self-reported health beliefs had consistent, strong effects and a better predictive role. Three dimensions of these health beliefs are characteristics of the individual: 1) attitudes toward psychiatric medication such as pharmacophobia (fear of taking drugs or medicines), 2) health locus of control (the belief patients have about who or what agent determines the state of their health), 3) psychological reactance (an emotional reaction in direct contradiction to rules or regulations that threaten or suppress certain freedoms in behavior). They can be measured by the Patient Health Beliefs Questionnaire on Psychiatric Treatment. The attitude toward each specific medication can be measured by the necessity-concern framework and summarized as the presence or absence of skepticism about that drug. After 25 years conducting pharmacokinetic studies in psychiatric drugs, particularly antipsychotics, we have limited understanding of how to use blood levels to predict the effects of non-adherence or to establish it. EXPERT OPINION ON FUTURE STUDIES: Future studies to predict adherence should include the inpatient setting and explore insight. Studying the pharmacokinetics associated with non-adherence in each psychiatric drug is a major challenge. Medication adherence is a complex and dynamic process changing over time in the same patient. Personalizing adherence using psychological or pharmacological variables are in their initial stages.Entities:
Keywords: attitude to health; drug monitoring; health behavior; medication adherence; psychiatry; psychopharmacology
Year: 2020 PMID: 33116427 PMCID: PMC7555336 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S242693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
HBM and Medication Adherence
The HBM predicts health-related behaviors by focusing on the attitudes and beliefs of individuals. This model emerged in the 1950s as an application from the behavioral sciences to health problems and currently persists as the most widely recognized conceptual framework for explaining and predicting health-related behaviors by focusing on the attitudes and beliefs of individuals. |
The original DAI-10 included 10 questions, each with true/false answers pertaining to various aspects of the patient’s perceptions and experiences of psychiatric treatment. DAI-10 scoring ranges from −10 to +10 with a total score >0 indicating a positive attitude toward psychiatric medications (pharmacophilia) and a total score <0 indicating a negative attitude toward psychiatric medications (pharmacophobia). A clinimetric version of the DAI |
HLOC reflects patients’ beliefs about who or what is responsible for the management of their psychiatric disorder, influencing their health behaviors and consequently their mental health outcomes. Traditionally, an internally oriented patient (ie, a patient believing that control of his/her health condition and health-related outcomes is contingent on his/her own behaviors and actions) has been considered more likely to engage in healthy behavior than an externally oriented patient (outside factors such as doctors, other people, or chance determine health outcomes). The MHLC-C An internal locus of control subscale (internality). Three external locus of control scales (chance, doctors, and other powerful people). |
Psychological reactance can be considered the emotional reaction in direct contradiction to rules or regulations that threaten or suppress certain freedoms in behavior. Psychological reactance theory is a commonly used framework for understanding health-care service users’ resistance to persuasive health messages such as the need for adherence to prescribed treatment. According to psychological reactance theory, freedom of behavior is an important, beneficial, and pervasive aspect of people’s lives; when that freedom is threatened, they become motivated to restore it. The Hong Psychological Reactance Scale |
Abbreviations: DAI-10, Drug Attitude Inventory with 10 items; HBM, health belief model; HLOC, health locus of control.
Systematic Reviews of Sociodemographic and Clinical Predictors of Adherence with Prescribed Psychiatric Treatment
| Author | Samples and Methodology | Results (Only Significant Results are Described) |
|---|---|---|
| Rivero-Santana et al | Systematic review of 32 observational studies of patients with depressive disorders using antidepressants. | ↑ Adherence with: ↑ age, and |
| Sendt et al | Systematic review of 13 observational studies of patients with schizophrenia using antipsychotics. | ↑ Adherence with: ↑ positive attitude to medication, and |
| Edgcomb and Zima | Systematic review and meta-analysis of 28 studies of predictors of adherence to psychopharmacological treatment among children (<19 years old) with a primary psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, recent suicide attempt, or psychiatric hospitalization. | ↓ Adherence with: ↑ illness severity OR=0.44 (CI.32–0.62); p< 0.001 |
| Garcia et al | Systematic review of 38 studies including patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders and bipolar disorder. | ↓ Adherence with: ↓ age |
| Czobor et al | A patient-level meta-analysis of combined CATIE and EUFEST studies on schizophrenic patients. | ↓ Adherence with: substance use OR=2.01(CI 1.38–2.95); p=0.0003 |
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CATIE, The Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness Study; CI, 95% confidence interval; EUFEST, The European First Episode Schizophrenia Study Trial; OR, odds ratio.
Methods to Assess Adherence to Oral Medications
| Test | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Medication consumed under direct observation | Most accurate | Impractical for routine use. Patients can hide pills in the mouth and discard them. |
| Measurement of the level of medicine or metabolite in blood | Objective | Lower metabolism and “white coat” adherence can give a false impression of adherence; expensive; invasive; requires laboratory; need multiple levels to calculate individual variability; validity of therapeutic ranges varies; each drug has its pharmacokinetic profile, which is poorly investigated; can over- or underestimate depending on behavior immediately prior to test; metabolism is influence by genetic, environmental and personal variables |
| Measurement of a biologic marker in blood | Objective; in clinical trials, can also be used to measure placebo | Requires expensive quantitative assays and collection of bodily fluids; impractical |
| Self-reporting by the patient (interview, diary, questionnaire) | Subjective; simple and easy to use; noninvasive; readily available; inexpensive; sensitive for non-adherence; the most useful in a clinical setting for large studies | No evidence that the drug is actually ingested; not accurate, results are easily distorted by the patient; patient is aware of the measurement |
| Physician perception | Subjective; simple; non-invasive | Validity is extremely poor; physicians overestimate adherence |
| Pill counts | Objective, quantifiable and easy to perform | Time consuming; data easily altered by the patient (eg, pill dumping); provides no information about timing of missed doses or about times of day that medications are taken; requires patients bring pills for counting |
| Rates of prescription refills | Objective: easy to obtain data | A prescription refill is not equivalent to ingestion of medication; requires a closed pharmacy system |
| Assessment of the patient’s clinical response | Simple; generally easy to perform | Factors other than medication adherence can affect clinical response |
| Electronic medication monitors | Precise; results are easily quantified; tracks patterns of taking medication | Expensive; poorly integrates with the elderly; assumes medication is consumed when bottle/compartment is opened; requires return visits and downloading data from medication vials and expertise in interpreting data |
| Measurement of physiologic markers (eg, heart rate in patients taking beta-blockers) | Often easy to perform | Marker may be absent for another reason |
Our Studies in Medication Adherence of Psychiatric Medication in Outpatients That Analyzed Sociodemographic (Gender, Age and Educational Level) Variables, Clinical Variables (Psychiatric Diagnosis), Medication Variables (Class, Treatment Duration, Polypharmacy), and Self-Reported Health Beliefs
| Author | Sample and Methodology | Results (Only Significant Results are Described) |
|---|---|---|
| De las Cuevas et al | 145 consecutive psychiatric outpatients with depression. | |
| De las Cuevas et al | 967 consecutive psychiatric outpatients, all diagnoses. | |
| De las Cuevas et al | 1291 psychiatric outpatients from Spain, Argentina and Venezuela. | |
40% in skeptical patients 44% in skeptical and pharmacophobic patients 44% in pharmacophobic patients |
Notes: aPharmacophobia was measured by the Drug Attitude Inventory-10 items; it represents the fear of taking drugs or medicines. Pharmacophobia refers to an attitude toward medications in general while skepticism refers to an attitude toward a specific psychiatric medication. bSkepticism about a specific medication was defined using the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire-Specific Scale; it means a patient had high concern about adverse reactions and low belief in the necessity of taking that medication.
Abbreviations: CI, 95% confidence interval; HLOC, health locus of control; MMAS-4, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale, 4 items; MMAS-8, Morisky Medication Adherence Scale, 8 items; OR, odds ratio; SC, standardized coefficient.