Introduction
The concept of therapeutic adherence was defined by the World Health Organization with a more inclusive vision, which highlights the diverse interdisciplinary recommendations that must be complied by patients with chronic disease and, additionally, evidences the patient’s active participation during the disease process.1 In this sense, it was agreed that therapeutic adherence corresponded to the “degree to which a person’s behavior in relation with taking medications, following a dietary regime, or modifying life habits corresponds to recommendations agreed by a health care provider”.1) The low level of adherence to the therapeutic regime is well-known throughout the spectrum of chronic disease.2) In developed countries, only 50% of the people who suffer from chronic disease comply with the prescribed treatment, while in developing countries this adherence may be lower because of the scarcity of resources and inequities in access to health services.1,3)
Lack of adherence is attributed to multiple factors; according to the World Health Organization, five dimensions exist that constitute the Multidimensional Model of Adherence: health system and staff, therapy, disease, patient, and socioeconomic aspects.1) Regarding arterial hypertension and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-adherence to the therapeutic regime constitutes a public health problem. In this respect, very variable figures have been reported of the prevalence of adherence to medications ranging between 24.1% and 92.7%4 in patients with arterial hypertension and between 38.5% and 93.1%5 in patients with T2DM. With non-pharmacological aspects, non-adherence is most common, thus, non-compliance frequencies have been found ranging between 33.2% and 25% in diabetic patients6,7 and 68.8% in hypertensive patients,8 while for dietary concerns, non-compliance has been reported between 88% and 44.8% in diabetic patients6,7 and 30.9% in hypertensive patients.8
Bearing in mind the disease burden In arterial hypertension and T2DM and the low therapeutic adherence (on average 50%),1 in the future it is expected that complications from these two pathologies to become the principal threats to public health resources globally9 because this implies higher rates of hospitalization and, hence, increased economic and social costs. Research has been conducted to identify the factors associated to adherence to treatment,10 however, most has focused on the aspect of pharmacological compliance, without measuring adherence to changes in lifestyle, like diet, physical activity, consumption of alcohol and tobacco, among others, of which evidence exists that its adhesion contributes to achieving the therapeutic objectives.11,12 In this sense, the literature has indicated that nursing, as part of the health staff, plays a fundamental role in improving this problem, especially through education actions aimed at modifying lifestyles and understanding the disease.13) Consequently, the aim of this study was to determine the factors associated with adherence to the therapeutic regime (pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment) in patients with arterial hypertension and T2DM cared for in primary care centers in the city of Bucaramanga in Colombia.
Methods
Study design and population. An analytical cross-sectional study was conducted in 2013 in patients with medical diagnosis of arterial hypertension or T2DM belonging to cardiovascular risk programs from two primary care institutions, one of public nature from the city of Bucaramanga-Colombia. The inclusion criteria involved individuals over 18 years of age, totally independent of their care and actively attending cardiovascular risk programs. The study excluded pregnant women, individuals with altered mental sphere, with chronic or severe alterations, and with communication limitations. To calculate the sample size, the study took as reference an available population of 7,000 people, an expected adherence to the therapeutic regime of 50%, 95% confidence interval, a design effect of 1, and losses due to non-response rate of 20%, obtaining as a result a sample size of 438 people. Probabilistic sampling (simple random) was used for sample selection.
Measurements. The work assessed sociodemographic and clinical factors, like age, sex, marital status, socioeconomic level, distance between the place of residence and the health care center, social security regime, occupation, disease suffered, time registered with the cardiovascular risk program, number of hospitalizations within the last year, short-form Charlson Comorbidity Index,14 risk of general cardiovascular disease at 10 years, according to Framingham,15 and number of pills taken per day. This information was gathered by reviewing the participants’ medical records and confirmed during the application of self-report instruments. Adherence to therapeutic regime was measured with the label Nursing Outcomes Classification “Treatment Behavior: Illness or Injury”,16 which evaluates compliance with the medication regime, diet and activity prescribed, supervision of the therapeutic effects and avoidance of behaviors that potentiate the pathology. This is a self-report instrument with dichotomy response scale (yes/no), comprised of 13 items grouped into five dimensions. Total scores vary from 0 to 13 points, indicating that higher scores mean greater adherence and vice versa. The construct validity and test-retest reproducibility of said instrument yielded as a result a total explained variance of 67.62%, Cronbach’s alpha internal consistency of 0.60, and a test-retest reproducibility of 0.63. Factors related with adherence were measured with the instrument “Factors that influence on adherence to pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments”,17 which evaluates factors related with the following aspects: (I) socioeconomic; (II) provider: health system and staff; (III) therapy, and (IV) patient. This instrument can be self-completed or completed with aid; it has a Likert-type response scale with three options (never / sometimes / always) and it is comprised of 24 items grouped into four dimensions that explain 45% of the variance and report a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.60.
Statistical analysis. The total score of adherence to the therapeutic regime did not show normal distribution (Shapiro-Wilk test, p <0.001); thereafter, it was described with the median, first and third quartile. A bivariate analysis was performed between the total score of adherence to treatment (quadratic transformation) and the sociodemographic and clinical variables and factors influencing adherence to the therapeutic regime through linear regressions. A multivariate analysis was carried out, an automated stepwise backward regression methodology was used; the variables obtaining a value of p ≤0.20 in the bivariate analysis were included in the multiple linear model, variables with p ≤0.05 were retained in the model. No variable was considered as the main exposure. The original scale of the influential factors instrument has three response options (never/ sometimes / always); for this analysis, the categories sometimes and always were grouped as reference category and never as risk category. Once the model was determined, the multi-collinearity was evaluated with thee variance inflation factor (VIF), considering collinearity with VIF>10. Model specification was evaluated with linktest, indicating adequate specification with non-significant hatsq (p≥0.05). The assumptions of the linear model were assessed: linearity was evaluated with studentized residuals, the normality of the residuals was explored with the Q-Q-plot graphic, P-P plot and the Shapiro Wilk test; homoscedasticity with the Cook-Weisberg test, fulfilling all the assumptions of the linear model.
Ethical considerations. This study was approved by an institutional research ethics committee and was approved by the participating institutions. The research subjects provided a previously written informed consent. It also received written authorization by the author of the instrument “influential factors in adherence to pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments” for use in this research.
Results
In all, 500 patients were studied (69.4% had arterial hypertension, 9.0% DM, and 21.6% had both pathologies). The median age of the population was 68 years of age (Q1=59 years; Q3=75) and 69.0% were women; 52.2% were married/common law; 58% were in the low socioeconomic level; 65% had primary education; 44.8% were housekeepers. The median of pills taken by patients per day was five pills (Q1=3; Q3=7 pills). Lack of comorbidity was identified in 90.0%, according to the Charlson index 12% and 48.47% had high and very high risk of cardiovascular disease at 10 years, according to Framingham.
The median of the total score of adherence to the therapeutic regime was 10 over a total of 13 points (Q1=9; Q3=11) (total score of adherence with quadratic transformation, mean of 99.5±37.5 points). The bivariate analysis with sociodemographic and clinical factors shows that having a low socioeconomic level and being in the subsidized health regime diminish the adherence score, while a greater time being registered in the cardiovascular risk program increases the level of adherence (Table 1).
The socioeconomic-type influential factors that do not favor adherence include not having the economic resources to travel to the consultation site, not being able to read written information about managing their disease, and not having support from their families or close friends to comply with their treatment; on the other hand, when people reported that changes in diet were not made difficult due to the high cost of foods recommended, this was associated with increased adherence. Regarding factors related with the health system and staff, when patients stated that the people caring for them never respond to their concerns and difficulties with respect to their treatment; this was associated with a decreased level of adherence. With regards to the influential factors related with the therapy, it was evident that the majority of the factors affect positively on adherence, and on factors related with the patient; people who never manifest interest for knowing about their health condition and how to care for themselves had lower adherence (Table 2).
The multivariate analysis found seven factors associated with adherence to the therapeutic regime; three of which affect negatively on adherence, two of them related with socioeconomic aspects: belonging to the government subsidized regime compared to the so-called contributive (private) regime and never being able to read written information about managing their disease; the third was related with the health system and staff: not receiving information about the benefits of the medications ordered by the physician. Finally, when patients state “never” to each of the following four statements, adherence is favored positively: the diverse occupations in and out of the house hinder their following the treatment; when your symptoms improve, do you interrupt treatment; have you previously had difficulties to comply with your treatment; and do you believe there are customs about foods and exercise that are difficult to change (Table 3).
Discussion
Non-adherence is a global phenomenon of serious consequences and it is present in almost every chronic disease. It is related with multiple aspects, among them socioeconomic, the health system and staff, therapy, the disease, and patients, which makes it complex to framework and intervene.1 The principal findings of the study permit showing that factors related specifically with therapy affect the total score of adherence to the therapeutic regime, among them aspects concerning diverse occupations, antecedents of difficulties, interruption of treatment, and beliefs about eating habits and exercise; followed by socioeconomic factors and system factors, like the social security regime, not being able to read information about the disease, and not receiving information about the benefits of the medications ordered by the health providers.
This study showed that not being able to read written information about managing the disease and not receiving information about the benefits of the medications ordered by the physician were associated with low levels of adherence; these two aspects are highly related with the level of schooling and knowledge. For this study, the population was principally characterized by having a low (58.0%) and medium (41.4%) socioeconomic level, likewise, 11.0% was illiterate and 65.4% only had primary school education. These results agree with the findings described by Castaño-Castrillón et al.,18 who, with 200 hypertensive patients cared for in different low-complexity healthcare centers in the city of Manizales - Colombia, measured adherence with the questionnaire by Martín-Bayarre-Grau (MBG) and found low levels of adherence associated with low educational level and low knowledge of the pathology. Also, Ghembaza et al., (19 found a positive relationship between patients’ knowledge about the complications of hypertension and adherence (p<0.003; OR=0.46) in a study conducted with 453 patients from a public primary care center in the department of Tlemcen in Algeria. Likewise, Rodríguez-Abt et al.,20 in 2017, investigated the association between knowledge about hypertension and adherence to the treatment (MBG measure) in 340 hypertensive patients cared for in cardiology consultation in a National Hospital in Lima - Peru, and determined that patients with low knowledge of hypertension have 1.5 times more probability of having partial adherence to the treatment than patients with high knowledge. Multiple studies have evidenced the relationship between the level of knowledge and adherence to the treatment in both hypertension and diabetes mellitus.7,21
With respect to improving symptoms and interrupting the treatment, it was found that not interrupting the treatment, even if symptoms improve, favors adherence to the treatment. In this sense, a systematic review of qualitative research on the perspectives of hypertension and adherence to medications, which synthesized information from 59 articles (53 of them qualitative) and studies derived from 16 countries, evidenced that participants reduce or interrupt intentionally the treatment without consulting their treating physician; commonly, participants perceive that their blood pressure improves when symptoms diminish or when they are not stressed, and that the treatment is not necessary at that those moments.22
In addition, it was found that belonging to the subsidized regime is associated negatively with adherence to treatment, which may be because people belonging to this regime are of scarce economic resources, which hinders compliance with the therapeutic regime, for example, adoption of an appropriate diet according to their health condition, frequent follow-up visits with the treating physician, and the need to purchase medications when these are not readily dispensed by the health provider. In this respect, the scientific literature indicates that lack of economic resources do not favor adherence, given that, for example, patients stop taking medications due to their high costs and stop attending their appointments, among others.5,7,21,22
Other relevant aspects were related with stating “never” having had prior difficulties to comply with the treatment, or diverse occupations in and out of the house that hinder their following the treatment, which was associated positively with adherence. In that respect, some studies have reported that being busy keeps patients from taking their medications, engaging in exercise, or attending control appointments.7,22 Likewise, it was found that if they never “believe that customs exist about foods and exercise that are difficult to change”, this favors adherence positively. In this regard, it has been documented that the attitudes of the individuals, their sex, lack of motivation, beliefs, being busy, and the sense of self-care, among others, influence adherence significantly and, hence, on the adoption of healthy behavioral changes.7,23,24
Among the strengths of this study, we highlight the measurement of adherence to treatment, pharmacological and non-pharmacological, in patients with arterial hypertension and T2DM. Most studies only evaluate adherence to pharmacological treatment. Similarly, the study highlights the size and probabilistic sample selection, which makes it representative and control selection bias. Further, the influential factors of adherence were studied framed within a model scientifically known and established by the World Health Organization (Multidimensional Model of Adherence). However, some limitations to be noted emerge, having considered only patients who were active in cardiovascular risk programs, which could represent a population with higher adherence with respect to those who are not active. In addition, as known, self-report instruments are easy and practical to use and some have been validated against objective measurement methods in elderly populations with hypertension and Parkinson’s disease, nevertheless, they have the disadvantage of overestimating the measurement of adherence and it is likely that each method varies in its performance, according to the characteristics of the population studied.10
Regarding the implications of this study for the practice, for health services providers and for health professionals, it is important to know the factors that influence on the behavior of adherence of individuals with processes of chronic disease, like arterial hypertension and T2DM, given that these affect people’s behaviors, leading them to not complying strictly with the therapeutic regime prescribed and, thereby, not complying with the therapeutic objectives. In this sense, nursing - as part of the health staff in primary care and within the current role highlighted by the Comprehensive Health Care Model in Colombia - can lead individual and collective actions to maintain health and diminish degrees of disability in people with these pathologies. Similarly, the influential factors identified in this study could be useful to design future studies of nursing intervention aimed at improving adherence to the therapeutic regime in this population, a key aspect in optimizing the use of resources, an action that is part of the responsibilities of nursing management. (25
To conclude, this study identified the therapy, socioeconomic, and health system/health staff factors associated with measuring adherence to the therapeutic regime (pharmacological and non-pharmacological) in patients with arterial hypertension and T2DM; three of them affecting adherence negatively (subsidized social security regime, not being able to read written information about managing the disease, and not receiving information about the benefits of the medications ordered by the health providers) and four factors favoring adherence (not having diverse occupations, not interrupting treatment even if symptoms improve, not having antecedents of difficulties to comply with the treatment, and not believing that customs exist about foods and exercises that are difficult to change). The influential factors identified in this study could be useful to design future studies of nursing intervention aimed at improving adherence to the therapeutic regime in this population.