Medication Beliefs and Adherence to Antiseizure Medications

Author:

Bhalla Devender1234ORCID,Lotfalinezhad Elham56ORCID,Amini Fatemeh5ORCID,Delbari Ahmad5ORCID,Fadaye-Vatan Reza5ORCID,Saii Vida1ORCID,Gharagozli Kurosh17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Iranian Epilepsy Association, Tehran, Iran

2. Sudan League of Epilepsy and Neurology (SLeN), Khartoum, Sudan

3. Nepal Interest Group of Epilepsy and Neurology (NiGEN), Kathmandu, Nepal

4. Pôle Universitaire Euclide Intergovernmental UN Treaty 49006/49007, Bangui, Central African Republic

5. Iranian Research Centre on Aging, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran

6. Department of Health Education and Promotion, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, Iran

7. Department of Neurology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran

Abstract

Introduction. The primary objective of our study was to determine the nature of medication beliefs and their association with adherence to antiseizure medications (ASMs) among elderly epilepsy patients. Our secondary objective was to enhance the psychometric properties and factor structure parameters of the Beliefs about Medications Questionnaire (BMQ) adapted to epilepsy and affected aged subjects. Methods. A population-based survey was performed in which older adults (≥60 years of age) were invited for a free face-to-face consultation with the specialists as well as for the collection of necessary data. The eligible subjects were those who are affected with epilepsy and having epileptic seizures of any type. In addition, the participants were required to be of any sex, currently under treatment with ASMs, resident of Tehran, and able and interested to participate independently. All were carefully examined with a reasonably detailed case-history examination. Two Persian questionnaires used were Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) and BMQ. Those with a MARS score of ≥6 were considered as adherent to ASMs. All data were described in descriptive terms. We did a group comparison of means and proportions for all possible independent variables between adherents and nonadherents. Then, we did a hierarchical multiple linear regression. For this, independent variables were categorized into three different blocks: (a) sociodemographic block (Block-1), (b) treatment side-effect block (Block-2), and (c) BMQ block that included ten items of the BMQ scale (Block-3). We also did a forward step-wise linear regression by beginning with an empty model. We also estimated the psychometric properties and factor structure parameters of BMQ and its two subdomains. Results. Of all (N = 123, mean age: 63.3 years, 74.0% males), 78.0% were adherent (mean score: 7.0, 95% CI 6.2–7.8) to ASMs. The MARS scores were not different between males and females. The mean BMQ score was 23.4 (95% CI 19.8–27.0) with the mean need score of 20.0 (95% CI 18.0–22.0) and mean concern score of 16.5 (95% CI 14.3–18.7). A positive need-concern differential was 20.4%. Upon hierarchical regression, the adjusted R2 for Block-1 was 33.8%, and it was 53.8% for Block-2 and 92.2% for Block-3. Upon forward step-wise linear regression, we found that “ASMs disrupt my life” (ß −1.9, ES = −1.1, p = 0.008 ) as the only belief associated with adherence. The alpha coefficient of BMQ was 0.81. Conclusions. Ours is one of the very few studies that evaluated medication beliefs and their association with adherence to ASMs among elderly epilepsy patients in a non-western context. In our context, medication beliefs are likely to have an independent role in effecting adherence to ASMs, particularly the concern that “ASMs disrupt life.” Treating physicians should cultivate good conscience about ASMs and evaluate the patient’s medication beliefs early-on to identify those who might be at the risk of becoming nonadherent.

Funder

University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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