Author:
Kirchner Sophie-Kathrin,Lauseker Michael,Adorjan Kristina,Anderson-Schmidt Heike,Anghelescu Ion-George,Baune Bernhardt T.,Budde Monika,Dannlowski Udo,Dietrich Detlef E.,Fallgatter Andreas J.,Falkai Peter,Figge Christian,Gade Katrin,Heilbronner Urs,Hiendl Lena,Juckel Georg,Kalman Janos L.,Klöhn-Saghatolislam Farahnaz,Konrad Carsten,Lang Fabian U.,Oraki Kohshour Mojtaba,Papiol Sergi,Reich-Erkelenz Daniela,Reimer Jens,Reininghaus Eva Z.,Schaupp Sabrina K.,Schmauß Max,Schmitt Andrea,Schulte Eva Christina,Senner Simon,Spitzer Carsten,Vogl Thomas,Zimmermann Jörg,Hasan Alkomiet,Schulze Thomas G.,Senner Fanny
Abstract
IntroductionAccording to the World Health Organization, medication adherence is defined as the extent to which a person's behavior corresponds with an agreed recommendation from a healthcare provider. Approximately 50% of patients do not take their medication as prescribed, and non-adherence can contribute to the progress of a disease. For patients suffering from mental diseases non-adherence plays an important role. Various factors have been proposed as contributing to non-adherence, however the literature remains heterogeneous dependent on the analyzed patient subgroups. This study comprehensively evaluates the association of sociodemographic, clinical, personality and quality of life related factors with medication adherence by analyzing data from the PsyCourse study. The PsyCourse study is a large and cross-diagnostic cohort of psychiatric patients from the affective-to-psychotic spectrum.MethodsThe study sample comprised 1,062 patients from the PsyCourse study with various psychiatric diagnoses (mean [SD] age, 42.82 [12.98] years; 47.4% female). Data were analyzed to identify specific factors associated with medication adherence, and adherence was measured by a self-rating questionnaire. Odds ratios (OR) were estimated by a logistic regression for binary outcomes. Missing data were imputed using multiple imputation.ResultsThe following factors showed the strongest association with medication adherence: never having used illicit drugs (OR, 0.71), number of prescribed antipsychotics (OR, 1.40), the personality trait conscientiousness (OR, 1.26), and the environmental domain of quality of life (OR, 1.09).ConclusionIn a large and cross-diagnostic sample, we could show that a higher level of conscientiousness, a higher number of antipsychotic medication, a better quality of life within the environmental domain, and the absence of substance abuse contribute to a better medication adherence independent of the underlying disorder.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health