| Literature DB >> 35445996 |
Ofole Mgbako1,2,3,4, Ryan Conard5, Claude A Mellins6, Jagadisa-Devasri Dacus7, Robert H Remien6.
Abstract
Despite advances in antiretroviral treatment (ART), the HIV epidemic persists in the United States (U.S.), with inadequate adherence to treatment and care a major barrier to ending the epidemic. Health literacy is a critical factor in maximizing ART adherence and healthcare utilization, especially among vulnerable populations, including racial and ethnic minorities. This U.S-based systematic review examines psychosocial variables influencing health literacy among persons with HIV (PWH), with a focus on racial and ethnic minorities. Although findings are limited, some studies showed that HIV-related stigma, self-efficacy, and patient trust in providers mediate the relationship between health literacy and both ART adherence and HIV care retention. To inform effective, equitable health literacy interventions to promote adherence to HIV treatment and care, further research is needed to understand the factors driving the relationship between health literacy and HIV outcomes. Such work may broaden our understanding of health literacy in the context of racial equity.Entities:
Keywords: ART; Adherence; HIV; Health literacy; Retention in care
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35445996 PMCID: PMC9550694 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-022-03680-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of systematic review
Summary of Studies Identified and Used for this Review
| Reference | Authors | Study Population | Health Literacy/ | Association between Health Literacy and Retention in Care? | Association between Health Literacy and ART Adherence? | Other Psychosocial Factors | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health Literacy and Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy Among HIV-Infected Youth (2014) | Navarra et al | 50 adolescents (ages 13–24 years) | Health literacy measured via TOFHLA and REALM-teen Adherence measured through a 3-day self-report of missed doses | Health literacy was not predictive of adherence (OR = 0.954, 95%CI 0.893–1.018; p = 0.15) | Higher positive outcome expectancy led to increased adherence (OR = 1.07, 95%CI 1.02–1.12; p = 0.006) | Small sample size; self-reported data; wide age range of participants; style of surveys may have influenced responses | |
Health Literacy and Antiretroviral Adherence Among HIV-infected Adolescents (2010) | Murphy et al | 186 adolescents (ages 16–24) from five US cities | Health literacy measured via TOFHLA Adherence measured via Pediatric Adherence Questionnaire (missed dosages over 3 days) | No significant association between medication adherence and health literacy (OR = 1.00, 95%CI 0.96–1.05; p = 0.98) | When adjusted for self-efficacy towards adherence to medications, no difference (OR = 1.00, 95%CI 0.95–1.06; p = 0.85) | Subjective measures of adherence; adolescents may have been less likely to take ART due to being healthier and exhibiting fewer symptoms | |
| Health Literacy and Demographic Disparities in HIV Care Continuum Outcomes (2018) | Rebeiro et al | 575 adults in southern US | Health literacy measured via BHLS done by clinician ART adherence measured via questionnaire (missed ART in a week), and retention in care determined via if patient made 2 + visits 90 days apart in 1 year | No significant association between retention in care and health literacy (aRR = 1.10, 95%CI 0.84–1.43) | No significant association between medication adherence and health literacy (aRR = 1.01, 95%CI 0.73–1.40) | Individuals may have sought care outside of clinic but marked as lack of retention; adherence was by self-report; results may not be generalizable outside of southern US | |
| Health Literacy: An Overlooked Factor in Understanding HIV Health Disparities (2007) | Osborn et al | 204 adults from Chicago and Louisiana | Health literacy measured via REALM Medication adherence measured via PMAQ (missed dosages in 4 days) | Health literacy significantly predicted nonadherence (aOR = 2.12, 95% CI 1.93–2.32) | Health literacy mediates the relationship between race and adherence. When literacy factored in, medication adherence differences between white and African-American patients became nonsignificant (aOR = 1.80, 95% CI = 0.51–5.85; C statistic = 0.72) | Could not use objective measures of adherence so missed doses may have been underreported; the data comes from interviews from 5 years prior | |
| Risk and Protective Factors for Retention in HIV Care (2014) | Waldrop-Valverde et al | 210 adults from Miami and South Florida | Health Literacy measured by S-TOFHLA Retention in care measured through number of kept visits divided by number of visits scheduled over 28 weeks | No association between health literacy and adherence to medical or phlebotomy visits (test statistic not shown) | Neither patient-provider relationship nor social support was a moderator of the effects of health literacy on phlebotomy visit adherence | Limited geographical region; did not look into clinic factors that affect retention; study population recruited solely from clinic | |
The Association between Health Literacy and HIV Treatment Adherence: Further Evidence from Objectively Measured (2008) | Kalichman et. al | 145 adults in Atlanta, GA | Health literacy measured via TOFHLA HIV treatment adherence measured by monthly unannounced pill counts (pills counted/pills prescribed) | Association between lower health literacy and poorer adherence (OR = 3.77, 95%CI 1.46 – 9.93; p < .01) | Small sample size; narrow geographical region; only used TOFHLA; unmeasured outside factors (e.g. treatment attitudes) may mediate this relationship | ||
| Adherence to Combination Antiretroviral Therapies in HIV Patients of Low Health Literacy (1999) | Kalichman et. al | 318 adults in Atlanta, GA | Health Literacy measured via TOFHLA Medication adherence measured via questionnaire (included total AR pills taken/total AR pills prescribed) | Association between lower health literacy and HAART nonadherence was significant (OR = 3.9, 95%CI 1.1 – 13.4; p < .05) | When level of education (< 12 years) factored in, relationship between health literacy and adherence became nonsignificant | Self-reported data no assessment of neurocognitive impairment; only one assessment of health literacy; used flyers to recruit which may leave out people with lower literacy | |
| Critical, and not functional, health literacy is associated with missed HIV clinic visits in adults and older adults living with HIV in the Deep South (2020) | Fazeli et al | 95 adults from Southeastern US clinic | Health literacy measured by several areas (reading, self-efficacy, numeracy, and ability to appraise/access health info). Capacity to appraise/access health info specifically measured through NVS Engagement in care measured through number of missed visits/number of scheduled visits | Association found between health literacy and retention. Ability to appraise health info, specifically, was strong predictor of missed visits (β = -0.46, [-8.71]–[-1.86]; p < 0.001) | Greater levels of depressive symptoms, poorer neurocognitive functioning independent predictors of adherence | Used retrospective data for missed clinic visits; not all factors that affect visits accounted for; narrow demographics; small sample size | |
| Predictors of disparities in | Anderson et al | 699 adults from Atlanta, Georgia | Health literacy measured via S-TOFHLA Retention in care measured as number of kept visits/number of scheduled visits | Health literacy was the main predictor of 100% visit adherence (OR = 1.02, 95%CI 1.00–1.04; p = 0.024) | Health literacy mediates the relationship between race and adherence. When health literacy factored in, race became nonsignificant factor for retention in care. As patients viewed provider more favorably (measured by Attitudes Towards the HIV Healthcare Provider Scale), visit adherence decreased (β = -0.10, [-0.2]–[-0.01]; p = 0.037) | Not all possible factors accounted for; patients not retained in care not represented well, results may not be generalizable | |
| Literacy, self-efficacy, and HIV medication adherence (2006) | Wolf et al | 204 adults from Louisiana and Chicago | Health literacy measured via REALM Medication adherence to antiretroviral regimens measured via PMAQ (missed dosages in 4 days) | Association between low patient health literacy level and medication nonadherence in past 4 days (AOR 3.3, 95% CI 1.3–8.7) | Self-efficacy moderated the impact of low health literacy on medication adherence, reducing the association by 40% (AOR = 7.4, 95% CI 2.7–12.5) | Self-reported data; unable to control for other factors | |
| Literacy, Social Stigma, and HIV Medication Adherence (2008) | Waite et al | 204 PWH who received clinical care in Shreveport, Louisiana and Chicago, Illinois | Health literacy measured via REALM Medication adherence measured via PMAQ (missed dosages in 4 days) | Patients with low literacy were more than 3 × more likely to miss dosages in HAART (AOR = 3.3, 95% CI 1.3–8.7; p < 0.001) | Perceived social stigma moderated relationship between low literacy and improper adherence, reducing effect by 40% (AOR 3.1, 95% CI 1.3–7.7) | Did not measure other forms of stigma; self- reported data; results not generalizable from small sample size | |
| Health Literacy, Antiretroviral Adherence, and HIV-RNA Suppression (2006) | Paasche-Orlow et. al | 235 PWH with a history of alcohol abuse from Boston | Health literacy measured via REALM ART adherence measured via a questionnaire (if 100% adherent over previous 3 days) | People with lower health literacy had a higher chance of ART adherence (unadjusted OR = 2.23, 95% CI 1.15–4.30) | Self-reported data; adherence measures may not have been suited for people with low literacy; REALM not sufficient test for health literacy, narrow demographics so results not generalizable | ||
Health Literacy and Treatment Adherence in Hispanic HIV-infected Patients (2009) | Alcaide et al | 60 Hispanic adult PWH from Miami | Health literacy measured by S-TOFHLA Adherence measured by AACTG adherence interview (any doses missed in past 30 days, number of days without medication in last 4 days) | No relationship between poor health literacy and poor adherence to medication regimen (test statistic not shown) | Small sample size, self-reported data, STOFHLA not comprehensive enough, narrow demographic so results not generalizable, may not have gotten good representation of very low health literacy, potential language barrier problems | ||
| Knowledge of Antiretroviral Regimen Dosing and Adherence: A Longitudinal Study (2003) | Miller et al | 128 PWH starting a new HAART regimen | Health literacy measured via TOFHLA (Medication knowledge score, or MKS, was calculated as a separate variable Adherence measured by pill count, self-reported adherence (missed dosages in prior week), and MEMS electronic bottle caps | At week 8, bivariate analyses showed low health literacy independently predicted low MKS (correlation coefficient = 0.31, p = 0.005), which was consistent in multivariate model; at week 8, MKS was associated with adherence (test statistic not shown) | 9% of data could not be analyzed since they did not complete multiple surveys; self- reported data; small sample size | ||
| Health Literacy in HIV Treatment: Accurate Understanding of Key Biological Treatment Principles is Not Required for Good ART Adherence (2015) | Laws et. al | 32 adults in 2 New England cities | In-depth interviews with patients | Most had very limited biomedical understanding of HIV and antiretroviral therapy, however most reported good. Authors concluded most participants simply followed doctors' instructions without deep understanding | Limited geographical region; no new diagnoses; small sample size; unclear if healthcare providers had educated them on HIV or treatment during study | ||
| Mapping Patient–Identified Barriers and Facilitators to Retention in HIV Care and Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence to Andersen's Behavioral Model (2015) | Holtzman et al | 51 adults in clinics in Philadelphia, PA | In-depth interviews with participants | Low health literacy was not found to be a barrier to retention | Low health literacy found to be a barrier to adherence | Patients more likely to adhere to medications when reported providers spent time talking to them about their medications; Stigma cited as a barrier to retention; social support cited as a facilitator of both adherence and retention | Only looked at patients in primary HIV care; small sample size; sample mainly included heterosexual racial/ethnic minorities from urban settings; self-reported data |
| Building Trust and Relationships Between Patients and Providers: An Essential Complement to Health Literacy in HIV Care (2016) | Dawson-Rose et al | 28 focus groups with adult patients (135) and providers (71) from all over US and territories | PWH participants completed survey and participated in focus groups | Patients felt health literacy tied to trust in provider which determines retention in care | Patients felt health literacy tied to trust in provider which determines ART adherence | Long term patient-provider relationship with trust deemed critical to association between health literacy and adherence/retention. Minority participants had lower trust in health system | Questions focused more on the process of informational gathering; Participants were solely from clinics/HIV organizations |