Baseline medication adherence and response to an electronically delivered health literacy intervention targeting adherence.

Raymond L Ownby, Drenna Waldrop-Valverde, Joshua Caballero, Robin J Jacobs
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引用次数: 33

Abstract

Medication adherence in persons treated for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) continues to be an important focus for intervention. While high levels of adherence are required for good clinical outcomes, research shows many patients do not achieve these levels. Despite multiple interventions to improve adherence, most require multiple sessions delivered by trained clinicians. Cost and lack of trained personnel limit the availability of these interventions. Alternatives to clinician-delivered interventions are interventions provided via electronic devices (eg, personal/tablet computers and smartphones). Modern technology allows devices to provide tailoring of content to patient characteristics and learning needs, and to be excellent platforms to deliver multimedia teaching content. The intervention reported drew on research on health literacy in persons with HIV and the relation of health literacy to medication adherence in persons treated for HIV to develop an electronically delivered application. Using the Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills model as a conceptual framework for understanding patients' information needs, a computer-delivered intervention was developed, its usability and acceptability was assessed, and medication adherence in 118 patients for 1 month before and after they completed the intervention was evaluated. Changes in participant adherence were evaluated in sequential models with progressively lower levels of baseline medication adherence. Results show that although changes in adherence in the entire sample only approached statistical significance, individuals with adherence less than 95% showed significant increases in adherence over time. Participants' self-reported knowledge and behavioral skills increased over the course of the study. Their change in information predicted their post-intervention adherence, suggesting a link between the intervention's effects and outcomes. A computer-delivered intervention targeting HIV-related health literacy may thus be a useful strategy for improving patient adherence.

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基线药物依从性和对电子传递的以依从性为目标的健康素养干预的反应。
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)治疗患者的药物依从性仍然是干预的一个重要重点。虽然良好的临床结果需要高水平的依从性,但研究表明许多患者没有达到这些水平。尽管有多种干预措施来提高依从性,但大多数需要由训练有素的临床医生进行多次治疗。费用和缺乏训练有素的人员限制了这些干预措施的可用性。通过电子设备(如个人/平板电脑和智能手机)提供的干预措施可替代医生提供的干预措施。现代技术使设备能够根据患者的特点和学习需求提供量身定制的内容,并成为提供多媒体教学内容的优秀平台。所报告的干预措施借鉴了关于艾滋病毒感染者健康知识普及情况的研究以及健康知识普及与接受艾滋病毒治疗的人坚持服药的关系,开发了一种电子交付的应用程序。采用信息-动机-行为技能模型作为理解患者信息需求的概念框架,开发了一种计算机提供的干预措施,评估了其可用性和可接受性,并对118名患者完成干预前后1个月的药物依从性进行了评估。在逐渐降低基线药物依从性水平的顺序模型中评估参与者依从性的变化。结果显示,尽管整个样本中依从性的变化仅接近统计学意义,但依从性低于95%的个体随着时间的推移,依从性显著增加。在研究过程中,参与者自我报告的知识和行为技能有所提高。他们的信息变化预测了他们在干预后的依从性,这表明干预效果和结果之间存在联系。因此,针对艾滋病毒相关健康素养的计算机干预可能是提高患者依从性的有用策略。
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Chronic distress and the vulnerable host: a new target for HIV treatment and prevention? Apolipoprotein-E genotype and human immunodeficiency virus-associated neurocognitive disorder: the modulating effects of older age and disease severity. Baseline medication adherence and response to an electronically delivered health literacy intervention targeting adherence. Substance Abuse, Hepatitis C, and Aging in HIV: Common Cofactors that Contribute to Neurobehavioral Disturbances. Expression of mannose binding lectin in HIV-1-infected brain: implications for HIV-related neuronal damage and neuroAIDS.
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