1 / 41

Assessing Your Clients for Adherence: A Real World Approach

Assessing Your Clients for Adherence: A Real World Approach. Sharon Mannheimer, MD Harlem Hospital Center Treatment Adherence Network Meeting February 27, 2001. Adherence. A complex behavioral process involving progression through various stages

sonya-berg
Download Presentation

Assessing Your Clients for Adherence: A Real World Approach

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assessing Your Clients for Adherence:A Real World Approach Sharon Mannheimer, MD Harlem Hospital Center Treatment Adherence Network Meeting February 27, 2001

  2. Adherence • A complex behavioral process • involving progression through various stages • working toward the goal of maintaining 100% adherence with all doses all of the time • ultimate goal of improved quality of life and survival

  3. It is difficult to identify who will and won’t adhere to medications • No test available • No single patient characteristic 100% predictive • Physicians are poor predictors

  4. Assessing for adherence • complex • involves assessing clients’ progression toward full adherence to therapy • as well as assessing for a variety of barriers known to be associated with poorer adherence

  5. Steps Toward Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) 1. Acceptance of ART (Readiness) 2. Ability to take and adhere to ART 3. Maintenance of adherent behavior

  6. Adherence Behavior: Theoretical models • Theoretical models can provide a framework for assessing for behaviors such as adherence • Health Belief Model • Prochaska’s Transtheoretical Model of Change (TTM or TMC) • Information, Motivation and Behavioral Skills (IMB)

  7. Assessing Clients’ Progression Toward Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) 1. Acceptance of ART (Readiness) 2. Ability to take ART 3. Maintenance of adherent behavior

  8. Assessing for Acceptance of ART 1. Ask the patient • e.g., “Do you feel that you can take HIV medications two times a day, every day?” 2. Assess for barriers to acceptance • recent HIV diagnosis • denial of diagnosis • lack of knowledge • lack of trust in provider • lack of trust in medications • beliefs

  9. Acceptance of and Adherence to ART Importance of Trust Altice, et al. 4th Conf. onRetrovirus and OIs, 1997 A O R p value Acceptance TRUST in Physician Scale 0.08 <0.0001 MISTRUST Medications 0.30 <0.001 * There is an 8% increase in adherence for each unit increase in the 11-55 item Trust in Physician Scale

  10. Assessing Clients’ Progression Toward Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) 1. Acceptance of ART (Readiness) 2. Ability to take ART 3. Maintenance of adherent behavior

  11. Assessing client’s ability to take & adhere to ART Assess for: 1. Barriers to adherence 2. Motivation for adherence 3. Skills needed for adherence

  12. Assessing Barriers to Adherence: Adherence barriers can be classified as being related to: • Patient characteristics • Provider • Treatment regimen • Clinic/office characteristics • Disease characteristics

  13. Patient characteristics associated with lower adherence levels • Demographics • African American race • Social/environmental: • Lack of insurance or access • Active substance use • Homelessness • Poor social support • Doubt efficacy of medication • Confidentiality concerns

  14. Patient characteristics -2 • Lack of Knowledge • HIV treatment regimen • CD4 • Resistance • Psychological factors • beliefs: • Poor self-efficacy • 2 aspects of the Health Belief Model [Becker 1974]: 1) having greater perceived benefits from therapy 2) having fewer perceived barriers to treatment

  15. Race and Adherence • Lower adherence rates noted among African Americans in several studies • Ostrow. 8th CROI 2001; Mannheimer, XIII Int’l AIDS Conf. 2000; Gifford, JAIDS 2000; Kleeberger, XIII Int’l AIDS Conf. 2000; Singh, Clin Infect Dis1999; Wenger, 6th CROI 1999; Muma, AIDS Care 1995; Moore, NEJM 1994; Besch, Int’l AIDS Conf. 1992 • independent of education and drug use history in some studies • Nonwhite race may be a marker for other factors such as low literacy

  16. Substance Use (SU) and AdherenceMannheimer, et al, HATS data 2/01, updated from DurbanN= 164p = .005

  17. Substance Use & Adherence - 2HATS data 2/01 • Active substance users were: • less likely to report 100% adherence (p = 0.06) • less likely to report > 90% adherence (p < .04) • less likely to believe that ART was helpful in fighting HIV (fewer perceived benefits) (p = .03) • more likely to report stressful life events (p = .02)

  18. Active Substance Use and HIV RNA(HATS data 2/01, N = 164)p < .05

  19. Social support and adherenceGifford, et al. JAIDS 2000N = 133

  20. Barriers to Adherence to ART Altice, et al. 4th Conf. onRetrovirus and OIs, 1997 Adherence OR p value SOCIAL ISOLATION 0.08 0.0001 SIDE EFFECTS 0.09 0.0001 COMPLEXITY of Antiretroviral Regimen 0.33 0.01

  21. Psychological factors • Depression (Singh 1996, Broers 1994, Burack 1993) • Active psychiatric illness (Paterson Ann Intern Med 2000) • Stress (Gifford 2000, Singh 1996) • Poor coping skills (Singh 1996) • HIV “burnout” (Ostrow 8th CROI 2001)

  22. Provider-related barriers to adherence • Mistrust of provider • Provider’s interpersonal skills • Provider’s experience/expertise

  23. Predictors of AdherenceMontessori, et al (CROI 2000) (N=886) Variable AOR CI Male 1.96 1.28 - 3.01 Increased age (@10 yr) 1.33 1.2 - 1.57 AIDS at baseline 2.28 1.44 - 3.61 Physician experience 1.45 1.20 - 1.74 (per 100 pts) History IDU 0.50 0.36 - 0.71

  24. Medication-related barriers to adherence • fit with lifestyle • complexity / pill burden • dose frequency • side effects • duration

  25. Correlation With How Well Regimen Fits Patients’ Daily Life* (N = 1910) Patients responded that regimen fits in: 70 60 Not at all well 50 A little bit % of PatientsAdherent toTherapy† 40 Somewhat 30 Very well Extremely well 20 10 0 *P < .001. †Patients who reported no missed doses in the past week. Wenger et al., 6th Conf. on Retroviruses and OIs; 1999

  26. Fit with daily activities and AdherenceGifford, et al. JAIDS 2000N = 133

  27. Perceived fit and HIV RNAGifford JAIDS 2000 Patients having a good perceived fit of their regimens with their routine and daily activities (“high regimen convenience scores”) had lower viral loads (1.04 log copies/mL lower) than persons having “low regimen convenience scores”

  28. Virologic response by pill burden 90 (r=–0.57, P=0.0085) 80 70 60 50 Patients with plasma HIV RNA 50 copies/ml at 48 weeks (%) 40 30 PI NRTI NNRTI 20 10 Size of symbol is directly proportional to weight of the data point in the analysis. 0 5 10 15 20 Number of antiretroviral pills prescribed per day Bartlettt J. XIII IAC, Durban, 2000. Abstract 4998

  29. Disease-related barriers to adherence Health Status • AIDS, h/o OI • (Samet 1992, Singh 1996) • symptomatic • (Eldred 1997a)

  30. Clinical setting-related barriers to adherence • long waiting times • inconvenient clinic hours • unfriendly staff • lengthy delays between contact and appointments • substantial travel costs Cramer 1991; Cuneo, Clin Chest Med1989; Haynes 1979

  31. Motivation • Belief in efficacy of pills • greater perceived benefits from treatment(Balestra 1996, Eldred 1997, Ferris 1996, Mossar 1993, Muma 1995, Samet 1992, Smith 1997) • Self-efficacy • Gifford JAIDS 2000; Eldred 1997; Muma AIDS Care 1995 • Support • Morse 1991

  32. Assess for Behavioral skills helpful with adherence • Pill taking - difficulty swallowing pills • keeping to a schedule • forgetfulness • use of pillbox

  33. Assessing Clients’ Progression Toward Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) 1. Acceptance of ART (Readiness) 2. Ability to take ART 3. Maintenance of adherent behavior

  34. Adherence Scores Over TimeMannheimer, XIII int’l AIDS conf., 2000data from 2 large CPCRA clinical trials of ART (N = 732) P < .001for difference between mos 1 and 4 and mos 1 and 8

  35. Consistency of 100% adherenceand virologic outcomeMannheimer et al., data from participants in 2 CPCRA ART clinical trials N = 205 Number of follow-up visits with self-reported 100% adherence

  36. Assessing for Maintenance of Adherence in the field • Self-report • nonjudgmental • give permission to “miss” • Important to assess at every follow-up visit/encounter if possible • high risk of relapse even if in “maintenance” • Frequent follow-up

  37. Assessing for consistency of adherence • Assess Stage of Behavioral Change (Precontemplation, Contemplation, Preparation, Action, Maintenance) • e.g. for Maintenance: “Have you been taking medications against the HIV/AIDS virus regularly for the last 6 months?”

  38. Correlation of Stage of Behavioral Change with HIV RNAN= 1 N=4 N=45 N=34 N=76 p< .001

  39. Summary • Assessing for adherence is complex • Adherence should be assessed frequently • Involves assessing for: • acceptance of treatment • barriers to adherence • motivation and behavioral skills for adherence • stage of behavioral change

  40. For more HIV-related resources, please visit www.hivguidelines.org

More Related