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Associations Between Health Literacy and Medication Self-Management Among Community Health Center Patients with Uncontrolled Hypertension

机译:社区保健中心患者卫生素质与药物自我管理之间的协会,不受控制的高血压患者

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Purpose: Examine associations between health literacy and several medication self-management constructs among a population of adults with uncontrolled hypertension. Patients and Methods: Cross-sectional study of health center patients from the Chicago area with uncontrolled hypertension enrolled between April 2012 and February 2015. Medication self-management constructs—applied to hypertension medications, chronic condition medications and all medications—included: 1) medication reconciliation, 2) knowledge of drug indications, 3) understanding instructions and dosing, and 4) self-reported adherence over 4 days (no missed doses). We determined associations between health literacy and self-management outcomes using multivariable generalized linear regression. Results: There were 1460 patients who completed screening interviews; 62.9% enrolled and had complete baseline data collected, and were included in the analysis. Of 919 participants, 47.4% had likely limited (low), 33.2% possibly limited, and 19.4% likely adequate health literacy. Compared to participants with likely adequate health literacy, participants with low health literacy were less likely to have chronic medications reconciled (18.0% versus 29.6%, p=0.007), know indications for chronic medications (64.1% versus 83.1%, p 0.001), and demonstrate understanding of instructions and dosing (68.1% versus 82.9%, p=0.001). Self-reported adherence to hypertension medications was higher among the low health literacy group (65.6% versus 56.0%, p=0.010). In multivariable models, health literacy was strongly associated with knowledge of drug indications, and understanding of instructions and dosing. Conclusion: Low health literacy was associated with worse medication self-management in several domains. However, non-adherence was greatest in the most health literate in unadjusted analysis. Among a population of patients with uncontrolled hypertension, the drivers of poor control may vary by health literacy.
机译:目的:检查健康素质之间的关联和几种药物中的药物自我管理构建,具有不受控制的高血压的成年人。患者及方法:芝加哥地区健康中心患者的横截面研究与2012年4月和2015年4月之间的不受控制的高血压。药物自我管理构建构建 - 适用于高血压药物,慢性病症药物和所有药物:1)药物和解,2)药物适应症的知识,3)了解指示和给药,4)在4天内自我报告的依从性(没有错过剂量)。我们确定了使用多变量广义线性回归的健康识字和自我管理结果之间的关联。结果:有1460名患者完成筛选访谈; 62.9%注册并收集了完整的基线数据,并包含在分析中。在919名参与者中,47.4%可能有限(低),33.2%可能有限,19.4%的卫生素养可能。与有可能充足的健康素养的参与者相比,健康识别率低的参与者不太可能与慢性药物进行调节(18.0%对29.6%,P = 0.007),了解慢性药物的适应症(64.1%对83.1%,P <0.001) ,并证明对指令和给药的理解(68.1%对82.9%,p = 0.001)。低健康识字群中,对高血压药物的自我报告的粘附性较高(65.6%对56.0%,P = 0.010)。在多变量的型号中,健康素养与药物指示知识有关,以及对指示和给药的理解。结论:较低的健康素养与几个域中的药物自我管理更差。然而,在未经调整的分析中,在最健康的识字中,不遵守最大。在不受控制的高血压患者的患者中,控制的司机可能因健康识字而有所不同。

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