Medication Adherence among Rural, Low-Income Hypertensive Adults: A Randomized Trial of a Multimedia Community-Based Intervention

Author:

Martin Michelle Y.1,Kim Young-il1,Kratt Polly1,Litaker Mark S.1,Kohler Connie L.1,Schoenberger Yu-Mei1,Clarke Stephen J.1,Prayor-Patterson Heather1,Tseng Tung-Sung1,Pisu Maria1,Dale Williams O.1

Affiliation:

1. Michelle Y. Martin, PhD; Young-il Kim, PhD; Polly Kratt, PhD; Stephen J. Clarke, PhD; Heather Prayor-Patterson, MA; Maria Pisu, PhD; and O. Dale Williams, PhD, are with the Division of Preventative Medicine; Mark S. Litaker, PhD, is with Dental Diagnostic Department of Sciences; and Connie L. Kohler, DrPH, and Yu-Mei Schoenberger, PhD, are with the Department of Health Behavior, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama. Tung-Sung Tseng, DrPH, is with the School of Public Health, Louisiana...

Abstract

Purpose. Examine the effectiveness of a community-based, multimedia intervention on medication adherence among hypertensive adults. Design. Randomized controlled trial. Setting. Rural south Alabama. Subjects. Low-income adults (N = 434) receiving medication at no charge from a public health department or a Federally Qualified Health Center. Intervention. Both interventions were home-based and delivered via computer by a community health advisor. The adherence promotion (AP) intervention focused on theoretical variables related to adherence (e.g., barriers, decisional balance, and role models). The cancer control condition received general cancer information. Measures. Adherence was assessed by pill count. Other adherence-related variables, including barriers, self-efficacy, depression, and sociodemographic variables, were collected via a telephone survey. Analysis. Chi-square analysis tested the hypothesis that a greater proportion of participants in the AP intervention are ≥80% adherent compared to the control group. General linear modeling examined adherence as a continuous variable. Results. Participants receiving the intervention did not differ from individuals in the control group (51% vs. 49% adherent, respectively; p = .67). Clinic type predicted adherence (p < .0001), as did forgetting to take medications (p = .01) and difficulty getting to the clinic to obtain medications (p < .001). Conclusions. Multilevel interventions that focus on individual behavior and community-level targets (e.g., how health care is accessed and delivered) may be needed to improve medication adherence among low-income rural residents.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

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