Evaluation of patient compliance among hypertensive patients treated by specialists

2001 
Objectives: To evaluate compliance with antihypertensive therapy by a self-report in patients referred to hypertension specialists. Methods: We studied 484 treated hypertensive subjects referred to several hypertension clinics and who were treated since at least one year. Patients were asked to fill in the Compliance Evaluation Test (CET), a questionnaire with 6 questions previously validated to assess factors that could affect medication compliance. We defined patients as good compliant when No was answered to the 6 items, as minor noncompliant when 1 or 2 Yes were answered, and as noncompliant when 3 or more Yes were answered. A good agreement was demonstrated between CET score and compliance evaluated by the number of pills missed during the previous month according to patient interview. Results: We observed 8% of noncompliant, 53% of minor noncompliant and 39% of good compliant. Tab. Logistic regression analysis including age, sex, education level, blood pressure level and the number of antihypertensive tablets confirm the statistical differences observed. Conclusions : In clinical practice, a method of assessing medication compliance is to ask the patient for a self-report interview. We demonstrated that the compliance evaluation test is able to detect factors usually associated with poor compliance (young age, elevated blood pressure, number of tablets per day). The use of the compliance evaluation test may help physicians to face the problem of nonadherence among their hypertensive patients.
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