Teoria și practica aderenței: manual pentru clinicieni

Authors
  • A.M. Schweitzer
  • A.L. Dima
  • L.S. Vlahopol
  • S.I. Stanciu
Publication date 2015
ISBN
  • 9789730187625
Publisher Constanța, Romania: Baylor
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
Adherence to antiretroviral (ARV) treatment during adolescence and young adulthood is a significant clinical issue for the current management of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Romania. Understanding patients' own perceptions of their adherence behaviours and related psychological barriers is instrumental for developing robust interventions, and developing psychometrically sound instruments is essential for measuring adherence in this population. We adapted to Romanian an internationally validated questionnaire for the evaluation of ARV treatment adherence. We subsequently conducted a cross-sectional survey to examine its psychometric properties and investigate the relations between self-reported aspects of adherence and established indicators of adherence and health status: Pill count, doctor's assessment of patient's adherence and viral load. Results suggest that low self-reported adherence is particularly associated with experiencing side effects and emotional distress, as well as perceptions of high treatment difficulty and time demands, low self-efficacy, low treatment efficacy and low treatment satisfaction. Perceptions of improvements in health status were overall associated with increased adherence, but feeling good physically sometimes preceded non-adherence behaviours. The questionnaire proved psychometrically sound according to classical test theory criteria (e.g. Cronbach's α = 0.77, significant associations with adherence and health status indicators). Addressing adherence barriers in clinical practice with this population may help reduce their potential impact on behaviours.
Document type Book
Language Rumanian
Published at http://baylor.ro/category/cercetare
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