Title of article :
Antihypertensive Medication Adherence in the Department of Veterans Affairs
Author/Authors :
David Siegel، نويسنده , , Julio Lopez، نويسنده , , Joy Meier، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
7
From page :
26
To page :
32
Abstract :
Abstract Purpose Adherence measures the extent to which patients take medications as prescribed by their health care provider. The control of hypertension is dependent on medication adherence and may vary on the basis of antihypertensive medication class and other factors. Methods The Department of Veterans Affairs’ automated pharmacy database captures pharmacy medication use; International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, diagnostic codes; and laboratory and patient demographic data on a monthly basis. Hypertensive patients who used thiazide diuretics, beta-blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, calcium channel antagonists, and alpha-blockers from July 2002 to December 2003 were studied. The first date of prescription filling for each patient within the date range was the index date from which fill and refill dates were collected for up to 18 months to calculate medication posession ratios and days out of medication ratios. Patients were categorized as adherent if the medication posession ratio was 80% or greater. Logistic regression was used to study the association of medication class, age, gender, ethnicity, Veterans Affairs facility, and co-diagnosis with diabetes, schizophrenia/psychosis, depression, and dementia with medication adherence. Results We studied 40,492 hypertensive patients taking at least one antihypertensive drug class. The average age per class ranged from 67.4 to 72.9 years; 96% were male; and 51% were white, 8% were African-American, 4% were Asian-American, and 3% were Hispanic. Unadjusted adherence rates based on the medication posession ratio ranged from 78.3% for thiazide diuretics to 83.6% for angiotensin receptor blockers (P <.001). The number of medications (either total or antihypertensive) and age were independent predictors of better adherence. Black ethnicity and depression were associated with worse adherence. Conclusions Adherence rates with all antihypertensive medications were high. Although there were statistical differences by drug class, these differences were small. Ethnicity and depression identified groups that might benefit from programs to improve adherence.
Keywords :
hypertension , Antihypertensive drug class , beta-blockers , angiotensin receptor blockers , Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors , Calcium channel antagonists , Alpha-blockers , thiazide diuretics , Medication adherence
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine
Record number :
810955
Link To Document :
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