AI Article Synopsis

  • Medication adherence is essential for the successful treatment of children with HIV, but measuring it accurately can be difficult without advanced technology.
  • A study involving caregivers of 126 perinatally infected children assessed a new multidimensional adherence interview to improve detection of treatment nonadherence.
  • The findings revealed that only the caregivers' understanding of prescribed dosing frequencies significantly correlated with the children's viral load, indicating that enhancing caregiver knowledge could help address adherence challenges.

Article Abstract

Medication adherence is critical for children's HIV treatment success, but obtaining accurate assessments is challenging when complex measurement technologies are not feasible. Our goal was to evaluate a multidimensional adherence interview designed to improve on existing adherence measures. Data from caregivers (N = 126) of perinatally infected children were analyzed to determine the ability of the revised interview guide to detect potential treatment nonadherence. Questions related to viral load (VL) on a bivariate level included proportion of doses taken in the previous 3 days and 6 months, caregivers' knowledge of prescribed dosing frequencies, and caregivers' reports of problems associated with medication administration. VL was not associated with 3-day recall of missed doses. In multivariate analyses, only caregiver knowledge of prescribed dosing frequencies was uniquely associated with VL. Our modified interview appears to successfully identify family struggles with adherence and to have the capacity to help clinicians address medication adherence challenges.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2964376PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jana.2010.02.006DOI Listing

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