Patient Preference and Adherence (May 2014)
Characterizing weekly self-reported antihypertensive medication nonadherence across repeated occasions
Abstract
Corrine I Voils,1,2 Heather A King,1 Brian Neelon,1,2 Rick H Hoyle,3 Bryce B Reeve,4 Matthew L Maciejewski,1,2 William S Yancy Jr1,21Health Services Research and Development, Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center; 2Department of Medicine, Duke University; 3Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University; 4Department of Health Policy and Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USABackground: Little is known about weekly variability in medication nonadherence both between and within persons.Purpose: To characterize medication nonadherence across repeated, closely spaced occasions.Methods: This prospective cohort study comprised four unannounced telephone assessment occasions, each separated by approximately 2 weeks. On each occasion, adult outpatients taking at least a single antihypertensive medication completed a measure of extent of, and reasons for, nonadherence.Results: Two hundred and sixty-one participants completed 871 (83%) of 1,044 occasions. Nonadherence was reported on 152 (17.5%) of 871 occasions by 93 (36%) of 261 participants. The most commonly endorsed reasons for nonadherence were forgetting (39.5%), being busy (23.7%), and traveling (19.7%). Among 219 participants completing at least three occasions, 50% of the variability in extent of nonadherence was a result of within-person fluctuations, and 50% was a result of between-person differences.Conclusion: Interventions to reduce nonadherence should be informed by variability in the extent of nonadherence and specific reasons for nonadherence.Keywords: adherence, compliance, hypertension, intraindividual variability