Adherence to Medical Regimens October 31, 2007
Defining Adherence Categorical approach Formula approach Uses cutoff scores to classify Formula approach Combines multiple indicators or adherence Then categorizes patients Continuum approach Focuses on “behavior,” not “patient” Computes adherence rates for various health care behaviors
Methods for Measuring Adherence Health status Drug assays
Methods for Measuring Adherence Self-report Most frequently used Tend to overestimate Ratings by health care professionals Often based on info given by patient Potential for bias Health status may be used as an indicator
Methods for Measuring Adherence Behavioral observations Pill counts Monitoring devices
Factors Affecting Adherence Child characteristics Family system Medical system Disease & regiment considerations
Child characteristics Developmental status Cognitive Social-emotional Physical Emotional functioning Biological functioning
Family System Parental involvement Parental knowledge & problem solving skills Parental support Stress & conflict
Medical System Doctor-patient relationship Contextual aspects of medical setting Provider communication
Disease & Regimen Characteristics Chronicity Complexity Immediate & future consequences of adherence
Health Belief Model Susceptibility to a particular illness Severity or seriousness of the disease & its complications Benefits of prescribed health care actions Barriers to health care
Transtheoretical Model Precontemplation Contemplation Preparation Action Maintenance
Transtheoretical Model Decisional balance Self-efficacy
Problems in Intervention Research Small sample sizes Brief treatment durations & follow-up periods Combined treatment strategies Failure to match treatments to patient experience Homogeneous samples
Interventions Educational approaches Modeling Supervision by health care professionals
Interventions Visual cues or reminders Self-monitoring Incentives
Interventions Social support Reducing barriers & problem-solving