Association Between Perceived Life Chaos and Medication Adherence in a Postmyocardial Infarction Population

Author:

Zullig Leah L.1,Shaw Ryan J.1,Crowley Matthew J.1,Lindquist Jennifer1,Grambow Steven C.1,Peterson Eric1,Shah Bimal R.1,Bosworth Hayden B.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, NC (L.L.Z., R.J.S., M.J.C., J.L., S.C.G., H.B.B.); Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine (M.J.C., H.B.B.), Department of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics (S.C.G.), Division of Cardiology (E.P.), and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (H.B.B.) and School of Nursing (R.J.S., H.B.B.), Duke University, and Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University...

Abstract

Background— The benefits of medication adherence to control cardiovascular disease (CVD) are well defined, yet multiple studies have identified poor adherence. The influence of life chaos on medication adherence is unknown. Because this is a novel application of an instrument, our preliminary objective was to understand patient factors associated with chaos. The main objective was to evaluate the extent to which an instrument designed to measure life chaos is associated with CVD-medication nonadherence. Methods and Results— Using baseline data from an ongoing randomized trial to improve postmyocardial infarction (MI) management, multivariable logistic regression identified the association between life chaos and CVD-medication nonadherence. Patients had hypertension and a myocardial infarction in the past 3 years (n=406). Nearly 43% reported CVD-medication nonadherence in the past month. In simple linear regression, the following were associated with higher life chaos: medication nonadherence (β=1.86; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.96–2.76), female sex (β=1.22; 95% CI [0.22–2.24]), minority race (β=1.72; 95% CI [0.78–2.66]), having less than high school education (β=2.05; 95% CI [0.71–3.39]), low health literacy (β=2.06; 95% CI [0.86–3.26]), and inadequate financial status (β=1.93; 95% CI [0.87–3.00]). Being married (β=−2.09, 95% CI [−3.03 to −1.15]) was associated with lower life chaos. As chaos quartile increased, patients exhibited more nonadherence. In logistic regression, adjusting for sex, race, marital status, employment, education, health literacy, and financial status, a 1-unit life chaos increase was associated with a 7% increase (odds ratio, 1.07; 95% CI [1.02–1.12]) in odds of reporting medication nonadherence. Conclusions— Our results suggest that life chaos may be an important determinant of medication adherence. Life chaos screenings could identify those at risk for nonadherence. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT000901277

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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