MedPath

Patient-Provider Communication and Medication Adherence

Completed
Conditions
Hypertension
Registration Number
NCT01428011
Lead Sponsor
NYU Langone Health
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to understand how communication between African American and white patients with high blood pressure and his/her primary care provider effects whether a patient decides to take their high blood pressure medications.

Detailed Description

High blood pressure contributes to the racial disparities in death rates between minority patients and whites. Understanding the factors underlying racial disparities in high blood pressure-related outcomes is a major focus of Healthy People 2010. Several factors including access to care, patient preferences and lower socioeconomic status have been used to explain the differences seen in timely and effective delivery of preventive care between minority patients and whites. However, when these factors are controlled for, health disparities still exist. Recently, the Institute of Medicine identified interpersonal processes within the patient-provider relationship as a potential reason for the health disparities between minority and white patients. Specifically, providers' communication, including the ability to listen, collaborate, and be empathetic during the medical encounter has emerged as an important dimension of care that differs by race. Despite the increasing evidence that racial differences in patient-provider communication affects patient care, many of these studies have examined issues related to processes of care such as patient satisfaction with little attention to intermediate outcomes such as medication adherence. Further, studies that have used audio-taped analysis to examine racial differences in patient-provider communication are limited by one-dimensional coding systems that lack the ability to capture the mutual influence the patient and provider have on one another during the interaction. Thus, the potential pathways through which patient-provider communication contribute to high blood pressure-related disparities in minority patients compared to whites is not clearly understood. This proposed two-phase, mixed-methods research study, provides a unique opportunity to address these gaps by clarifying the effect of patient's race on patient-provider communication and medication adherence among 120 hypertensive African American and white patients receiving care in primary care practices. Specifically, findings from a qualitative analysis of patient-provider communication (Phase 1) will inform the development of a conceptual model that will be used to quantitatively evaluate the relationship between patient's race, patient-provider communication and medication adherence (Phase 2).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
114
Inclusion Criteria
  • self-identification as black/African American or white/Caucasian
  • Receiving care in the Bellevue Hospital Ambulatory Care Practice from the same primary care provider for at least 3 months;
  • Diagnosed with hypertension (ICD: # 401-401.9)
  • Taking at least one antihypertensive medication;
  • Age18 years or older
  • Fluent in English
Exclusion Criteria
  • Unable to give informed consent
  • Refuse to participate

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Medication Adherence3-months

Medication adherence will be assessed as a continuous variable with the Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS) and calculated as the percent of prescribed doses removed by the patient during the 3-month stud

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
patient-provider communicationBaseline

Patient-provider communication will be assessed with the validated Medical Interaction Process System (MIPS). Patient-provider communication will be defined as ratios using formulas derived from the audiotaped analysis. Ratios will be calculated by dividing the sum of all codes for the communication behavior of interest (e.g., provider dominated-talk) by the sum of all codes for the comparison communication behavior of interest (e.g., patient-dominated-talk).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Bellevue Hospital Ambulatory Care Practive

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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