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Erschienen in: Zeitschrift für Rheumatologie 1/2019

24.04.2018 | Originalien

Adherence and health literacy as related to outcome of patients treated for rheumatoid arthritis

Analyses of a large-scale observational study

verfasst von: Prof. Dr. J. G. Kuipers, M. Koller, F. Zeman, K. Müller, J. U. Rüffer

Erschienen in: Zeitschrift für Rheumatologie | Ausgabe 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

Disabilities in daily living and quality of life are key endpoints for evaluating the treatment outcome for rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Factors possibly contributing to good outcome are adherence and health literacy.

Methods

The survey included a representative nationwide sample of German rheumatologists and their patients with RA. The physician questionnaire included the disease activity score (DAS28) and medical prescriptions. The patient questionnaire included fatigue (EORTC QLQ-FA13), health assessment questionnaire (HAQ), quality of life (SF-12), health literacy (HELP), and patients’ listings of their medications. Adherence was operationalized as follows: patient-reported (CQR5), behavioral (concordance between physicians’ and patients’ listings of medications), physician-assessed, and a combined measure of physician rating (1 = very adherent, 0 = less adherent) and the match between physicians’ prescriptions and patients’ accounts of their medications (1 = perfect match, 0 = no perfect match) that yielded three categories of adherence: high, medium, and low. Simple and multiple linear regressions (controlling for age, sex, smoking, drinking alcohol, and sport) were calculated using adherence and health literacy as predictor variables, and disease activity and patient-reported outcomes as dependent variables.

Results

708 pairs of patient and physician questionnaires were analyzed. The mean patient age (73% women) was 60 years (SD = 12). Multiple regression analyses showed that high adherence was significantly associated with 5/7 outcome variables and health literacy with 7/7 outcome variables.

Conclusion

Adherence and health literacy had weak but consistent effects on most outcomes. Thus, enhancing adherence and understanding of medical information could improve outcome, which should be investigated in future interventional studies.
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Metadaten
Titel
Adherence and health literacy as related to outcome of patients treated for rheumatoid arthritis
Analyses of a large-scale observational study
verfasst von
Prof. Dr. J. G. Kuipers
M. Koller
F. Zeman
K. Müller
J. U. Rüffer
Publikationsdatum
24.04.2018
Verlag
Springer Medizin
Erschienen in
Zeitschrift für Rheumatologie / Ausgabe 1/2019
Print ISSN: 0340-1855
Elektronische ISSN: 1435-1250
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00393-018-0449-y

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