Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Pharmacy, Al-Quds University , Abu Deis, PO Box 20002, West Bank , Palestine
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
The aim of this study was to assess antipsychotic medication adherence and its relation to Psychiatric symptoms in a sample of patients with schizophrenia in Palestine.
Methods
Patients were recruited from the governmental psychiatry clinic in Ramallah in a cross-sectional study. The self-reported Morisky–Green–Levine (MGL) scale was used to measure patients’ adherence. Psychiatric symptoms were measured using the expanded Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS-E).
Key findings
Of the 130 participants in the study, 78 (60%) were men and mean age was 41.8 ± 9.8 years 70 (53.8%). of the sample participants were classified as low-adherent while 60 (46.2%) of patients classified as high adherent. That negative symptom scores of high adherence group are significantly lower than low adherence group (12.5 vs. 15.0, P = 0.002) and lower depression anxiety scores (18.3 vs. 22.1, P < 0.001) indicated that high adherence group had lower depression, anxiety, social isolation, anxiety and suicidal ideation symptoms than low-adherence group. The multivariate regression model demonstrated that four variables remain significant and associated with nonadherence; no formal education (OR = 2.11; CI: 0.8–3.8; P = 0.04), age (OR = 2.88; CI: 1.2–4.4; P = 0.01), having comorbidity (OR = 3.2; CI: 1.9–4.3; P = 0.01) and having higher negative symptoms scores (OR = 2.5; CI: 1.2–3.9; P = 0.03); as they are positively correlated to nonadherence.
Conclusion
Medication nonadherence was significant, and it was linked to poor psychiatric outcomes and adherence scores were unaffected by medication-related variables.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous),Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)