Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions

Objectives: This study aimed to identify factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication from a patient perspective. Methods: A web-based survey was developed based on health behavior theories. Descriptive analyses were conducted for all survey items. Analyses in a struct...

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Main Authors: Hajime Orimo, Masayo Sato, Shuichi Kimura, Keiko Wada, Xuelu Chen, Shigeto Yoshida, Bruce Crawford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-12-01
Series:Osteoporosis and Sarcopenia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405525517300742
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spelling doaj-163cc0ec1e6c4be29734c42dbbbadb3a2020-11-24T20:58:46ZengElsevierOsteoporosis and Sarcopenia2405-52552017-12-013417418410.1016/j.afos.2017.10.002Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptionsHajime Orimo0Masayo Sato1Shuichi Kimura2Keiko Wada3Xuelu Chen4Shigeto Yoshida5Bruce Crawford6Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital and Institute of Gerontology, Tokyo, JapanEli Lilly Japan K.K., Kobe, JapanEli Lilly Japan K.K., Kobe, JapanQuintilesIMS, Tokyo, JapanQuintilesIMS, Tokyo, JapanQuintilesIMS, Tokyo, JapanQuintilesIMS, Tokyo, JapanObjectives: This study aimed to identify factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication from a patient perspective. Methods: A web-based survey was developed based on health behavior theories. Descriptive analyses were conducted for all survey items. Analyses in a structural equation modeling framework were conducted to identify factors associated with treatment initiation and adherence. Results: Five hundred forty-five women completed the questionnaire. A majority were currently receiving medications for osteoporosis (n = 376, 69.0%) and 25.0% of these patients (n = 94) were considered adherent to their treatment. Knowledge was strongly associated with osteoporosis treatment initiation (standard error [SE], 0.58). Greater knowledge of disease was associated with increased likelihood of initiating medication. Medication complexity (SE, 0.49) and perceived susceptibility to fracture and loss of independence (SE, −0.37) were also associated with initiation. Perceived barriers (SE, −0.85) such as inconvenience, lack of efficacy and financial burden were observed to be the greatest obstacle to adherence. The greater the perceived barriers, the less likely patients were to adhere to medication. Patients' perception of self-efficacy (SE, 0.37) also affected adherence. The greater the patient perception of ability to independently manage their medication, the more likely they were to adhere to the medication. Conclusions: Different factors were found to be associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication. Patient knowledge of their disease and the perception of barriers were found to be the most influential. Empowering patients with the knowledge to better understand their disease and decreasing the perception of barriers through education initiatives may be effective in improving patient outcomes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405525517300742OsteoporosisAdherenceJapanPatient-centered care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hajime Orimo
Masayo Sato
Shuichi Kimura
Keiko Wada
Xuelu Chen
Shigeto Yoshida
Bruce Crawford
spellingShingle Hajime Orimo
Masayo Sato
Shuichi Kimura
Keiko Wada
Xuelu Chen
Shigeto Yoshida
Bruce Crawford
Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
Osteoporosis and Sarcopenia
Osteoporosis
Adherence
Japan
Patient-centered care
author_facet Hajime Orimo
Masayo Sato
Shuichi Kimura
Keiko Wada
Xuelu Chen
Shigeto Yoshida
Bruce Crawford
author_sort Hajime Orimo
title Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
title_short Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
title_full Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
title_fullStr Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in Japan: An analysis of patient perceptions
title_sort understanding the factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication in japan: an analysis of patient perceptions
publisher Elsevier
series Osteoporosis and Sarcopenia
issn 2405-5255
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Objectives: This study aimed to identify factors associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication from a patient perspective. Methods: A web-based survey was developed based on health behavior theories. Descriptive analyses were conducted for all survey items. Analyses in a structural equation modeling framework were conducted to identify factors associated with treatment initiation and adherence. Results: Five hundred forty-five women completed the questionnaire. A majority were currently receiving medications for osteoporosis (n = 376, 69.0%) and 25.0% of these patients (n = 94) were considered adherent to their treatment. Knowledge was strongly associated with osteoporosis treatment initiation (standard error [SE], 0.58). Greater knowledge of disease was associated with increased likelihood of initiating medication. Medication complexity (SE, 0.49) and perceived susceptibility to fracture and loss of independence (SE, −0.37) were also associated with initiation. Perceived barriers (SE, −0.85) such as inconvenience, lack of efficacy and financial burden were observed to be the greatest obstacle to adherence. The greater the perceived barriers, the less likely patients were to adhere to medication. Patients' perception of self-efficacy (SE, 0.37) also affected adherence. The greater the patient perception of ability to independently manage their medication, the more likely they were to adhere to the medication. Conclusions: Different factors were found to be associated with initiation and adherence of osteoporosis medication. Patient knowledge of their disease and the perception of barriers were found to be the most influential. Empowering patients with the knowledge to better understand their disease and decreasing the perception of barriers through education initiatives may be effective in improving patient outcomes.
topic Osteoporosis
Adherence
Japan
Patient-centered care
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405525517300742
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