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Venue of receiving diabetes self-management education and training and its impact on oral diabetic medication adherence

Authors :
Jun Wu
Mary Lynn Davis-Ajami
Zhiqiang Kevin Lu
Virginia Noxon
Source :
Primary care diabetes. 11(2)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

To determine predictors associated with the diabetes self-management education and training (DSME) venue and its impact on oral antidiabetic (OAD) medication adherence.The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey household component (MEPS-HC) data (2010-2012) identified adults with diabetes prescribed OAD medication(s) who completed a supplemental Diabetes Care Survey (DCS). Based on the DCS responses to questions about the number and type of DSME venue(s), two groups were created: (1) multiple venues (a physician or health professional plus internet and/or group classes) vs (2) single venue (physician or health professional only). The medication possession ratio (MPR) measured medication adherence, with 0.80 the cut-point defining adherent. Logistic regression examined factors associated with the DSME venue and its effect on OAD medication adherence.Of the 2119 respondents, 41.6% received DSME from multiple venues. Age (65years), education-level (college or higher), high-income, and diet modification were significantly more likely associated with receiving DSME from multiple venues. In single vs multiple venues, medication adherence was suboptimal (mean MPR 0.66 vs 0.64, p=0.245), and venue showed no influence on adherence (OR: 0.92, 95% CI, 0.73-1.16).Sociodemographic characteristics influence where adults with diabetes receive DSME. Adding different DSME venues may not address suboptimal OAD medication adherence.

Details

ISSN :
18780210
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Primary care diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef9e7aabb598f8bb1572a762a032d10d