09/30/2008 , 9:16 AM by Alex Sicre
It has been awhile since I have posted a “What I am Reading” or “What I have Found” post, so here you go. Some interesting stuff out there that sparked my interest.
From Reuter’s Health, a report on Sex Bias in Control of Cancer Pain:
“How well pain is managed in people with cancer apparently differs between men and women, new research hints. Dr. Kristine A. Donovan, of the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa, Florida, and colleagues examined pain severity and the adequacy of pain management in 131 cancer patients newly referred to a multidisciplinary cancer pain clinic.” Full Story
From LifeScript, a study that shows 1 in 5 Diabetics do not take their medication as prescribed. “Too many diabetics are neglecting to take life-saving prescription medicines regularly, one study warned. Published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, the study estimated that 21% of diabetics fail to adhere to their prescription schedule.” Full Story
Allan Showalter, MD from AlignMap discusses the Implications Of The Redundant Patient Compliance Review. I like to post abstracts and some compliance reviews, but his blog posts are always more insightful, biting and from an MD’s perspective. Full Story
And lastly, from the International Journal of STD and AIDS: Factors associated with lack of antiretroviral adherence among adolescents in a reference centre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Full Story.
Posted in:
Diabetes,
Facts,
HIV/AIDS,
Sicre
Comments: No Comments Tags: AIDS, Alignmap, Cancer, Diabetes, intelecare, lifescript, medical compliance, medication adherence, noncompliance, Reuters Health
07/29/2008 , 10:45 AM by Alex Sicre
Here is today’s medication adherence abstract from Medline:
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship between cognitive functioning and medication adherence in children and adolescents with perinatally acquired HIV infection.
METHODS: Children and adolescents, ages 3-18 (N = 1,429), received a cognitive evaluation and adherence assessment. Multiple logistic regression models were used to identify associations between adherence and cognitive status, adjusting for potential confounding factors.
RESULTS: Children’s average cognitive performance was within the low-average range; 16% of children were cognitively impaired (MDI/FSIQ <70). Cognitive status was not associated with adherence to full medication regimens; however, children with borderline/low average cognitive functioning (IQ 70-84) had increased odds of nonadherence to the protease inhibitor class of antiretroviral therapy. Recent stressful life events and child health characteristics, such as HIV RNA detectability, were significantly associated with nonadherence.
CONCLUSION: Cognitive status plays a limited role in medication adherence. Child and caregiver psychosocial and health characteristics should inform interventions to support adherence.