Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits

Objectives: The objectives of this study are to assess patient perspectives on their perceived benefits of hypertension and diabetes medications and determine associations between perceived benefits and demographics, adherence, and disease control. Methods: We interviewed 60 adults with type 2 diabe...

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Main Authors: Demetra S Gibson, Aviva G Nathan, Michael T Quinn, Neda Laiteerapong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-12-01
Series:SAGE Open Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312118821119
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spelling doaj-fec3468cc566444985cdd609d960e4d12020-11-25T02:34:08ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medicine2050-31212018-12-01610.1177/2050312118821119Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefitsDemetra S GibsonAviva G NathanMichael T QuinnNeda LaiteerapongObjectives: The objectives of this study are to assess patient perspectives on their perceived benefits of hypertension and diabetes medications and determine associations between perceived benefits and demographics, adherence, and disease control. Methods: We interviewed 60 adults with type 2 diabetes and hypertension on oral medications. Participants were asked what benefits they expected from taking their medications. Transcripts were analyzed using a modified template approach. Benefits were categorized into short-term, long-term, or misconceptions (e.g. “medications cure diabetes”). Associations between perceived benefits and demographics, adherence, hemoglobin A1c, and blood pressure were analyzed. Results: In general, participants had relatively high self-reported medication adherence and well-controlled disease. All participants identified benefits of their hypertension medications; however, only 85% identified benefits of their diabetes medications. Half described only short-term benefits (e.g. lower blood sugar) (48%); almost one-third described both short- and long-term benefits (e.g. prevent complications) (30% and 28%, respectively). In multivariate analysis, participants with higher comorbidity were more likely to name long-term benefits of hypertension medications (odds ratio 13.3 (1.8–97.8), p = 0.01). Discussion: Participants perceived short-term benefits of hypertension and diabetes medications more often than long-term benefits; participants with higher comorbidity identified more long-term benefits. Further studies are warranted to determine whether additional education on long-term benefits may improve adherence.https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312118821119
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Demetra S Gibson
Aviva G Nathan
Michael T Quinn
Neda Laiteerapong
spellingShingle Demetra S Gibson
Aviva G Nathan
Michael T Quinn
Neda Laiteerapong
Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
SAGE Open Medicine
author_facet Demetra S Gibson
Aviva G Nathan
Michael T Quinn
Neda Laiteerapong
author_sort Demetra S Gibson
title Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
title_short Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
title_full Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
title_fullStr Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
title_full_unstemmed Patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: Excessive focus on short-term benefits
title_sort patient expectations of hypertension and diabetes medication: excessive focus on short-term benefits
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open Medicine
issn 2050-3121
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Objectives: The objectives of this study are to assess patient perspectives on their perceived benefits of hypertension and diabetes medications and determine associations between perceived benefits and demographics, adherence, and disease control. Methods: We interviewed 60 adults with type 2 diabetes and hypertension on oral medications. Participants were asked what benefits they expected from taking their medications. Transcripts were analyzed using a modified template approach. Benefits were categorized into short-term, long-term, or misconceptions (e.g. “medications cure diabetes”). Associations between perceived benefits and demographics, adherence, hemoglobin A1c, and blood pressure were analyzed. Results: In general, participants had relatively high self-reported medication adherence and well-controlled disease. All participants identified benefits of their hypertension medications; however, only 85% identified benefits of their diabetes medications. Half described only short-term benefits (e.g. lower blood sugar) (48%); almost one-third described both short- and long-term benefits (e.g. prevent complications) (30% and 28%, respectively). In multivariate analysis, participants with higher comorbidity were more likely to name long-term benefits of hypertension medications (odds ratio 13.3 (1.8–97.8), p = 0.01). Discussion: Participants perceived short-term benefits of hypertension and diabetes medications more often than long-term benefits; participants with higher comorbidity identified more long-term benefits. Further studies are warranted to determine whether additional education on long-term benefits may improve adherence.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2050312118821119
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