|
AIDS Patient Care and STDs
Effects of a Treatment Adherence Enhancement Program on Health Literacy, Patient–Provider Relationships, and Adherence to HAART among Low-Income HIV-Positive Spanish-Speaking Latinos
To cite this article:
Gwen Van Servellen, Adeline Nyamathi, Felix Carpio, Daniel Pearce, Lorraine Garcia-Teague, Gilberto Herrera, Emilia Lombardi.
AIDS Patient Care and STDs.
November 2005,
19(11): 745-759.
doi:10.1089/apc.2005.19.745.
Gwen Van Servellen, R.N., Ph.D.School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, California. Adeline Nyamathi, A.N.P., Ph.D.School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, California. Felix Carpio, M.D., M.P.H.HIV Division, Alta Med Health Services Corporation, Los Angeles, California. Daniel Pearce, D.O.HIV Division, Alta Med Health Services Corporation, Los Angeles, California. Lorraine Garcia-Teague, F.N.P., Ph.D.School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, California. Gilberto Herrera, F.M.G.School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, California. Emilia Lombardi, Ph.D.Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA, Los Angeles, California. The impact of an adherence enhancement program for low income HIV-infected Spanishspeaking Latinos on health literacy, patient–provider relationships, and adherence to HAART was examined. Evaluations were conducted at baseline, 6 weeks, and 6 months for participants (n = 85) randomly assigned to either the intervention group or a comparison group; 69 (81%) remained in the study for the entire 6-month duration. The intervention group scored significantly better than the comparison group on 3 of 5 measures of HIV health literacy at 6 weeks and on 2 of 5 measures, at 6 months. While there was a weak trend for the intervention group to report an increase in self-efficacy of medication adherence management, baseline to 6 weeks, no other changes were significant. Perceptions of the quality of relationship and communications with their HIV-treating physicians improved both at 6 weeks (p = 0.04) and at 6 months (p < 0.001). The comparison group showed little change baseline to 6 weeks and baseline to 6 months. While there was a trend for the pilot group to report better medication adherence, these differences were not statistically significant. Further evaluation of the impact of this adherence enhancement program is needed.  This paper was cited by:Attrition and related trends in scientific rigor: A score card for ART adherence intervention research and recommendations for future directions K. Rivet Amico, Jennifer J. Harman, Megan A. O’Grady Current HIV/AIDS Reports. Dec 2008, Vol. 5, No. 4: 172-185 CrossRef Patient health literacy and participation in the health-care process Hirono Ishikawa, Eiji Yano Health Expectations. Jul 2008, Vol. 11, No. 2: 113-122 CrossRef Latinos and HIV/AIDS: Examining Factors Related to Disparity and Identifying Opportunities for Psychosocial Intervention Research Jeffrey S. Gonzalez, Ellen Setsuko Hendriksen, Erin Marie Collins, Ron E. Durán, Steven A. Safren AIDS and Behavior. Jun 2008 CrossRef Outcomes of a Multifaceted Medication Adherence Intervention for HIV-Positive Patients Kevin D. Dieckhaus, Victoria Odesina AIDS Patient Care and STDs. Feb 2007, Vol. 21, No. 2: 81-91 Abstract | Full Text PDF | Reprints & Permissions
|
|