Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Psychosocial Determinants of Medication Adherence in Hypertensive African Americans
The specific aims for this study are:
1. To examine the relationship between perceived racism and medication adherence among
hypertensive African-American patients.
2. To determine if psychological stress and depression mediate the relationship between
perceived racism and medication adherence.
Achieving and maintaining recommended blood pressure goals in hypertensive African Americans
is paramount to addressing racial disparities in hypertension-related morbidity and
mortality. Because antihypertensive therapy is the cornerstone of hypertension management,
good medication adherence is the key to adequate blood pressure control. Successful
approaches to racial disparities must address how to increase adherence to anti-hypertensive
medications.
Adherence to anti-hypertensive medications is likely multifactorial, and not solely related
to SES or access to medical care. Psychosocial factors such as stress and depression have
been implicated as important determinants of medication adherence. However, little is known
about how other psychosocial factors such as perceived racism impact anti-hypertensive
medication adherence. Understanding these relationships may assist in the development of
targeted strategies to achieve good medication adherence in hypertensive patients.
The objective is to understand the relationships between perceived racism and medication
adherence, while examining the role of depression, psychological stress, and self-efficacy
in a population of hypertensive African-American patients. 262 African American adult
hypertensive patients will be recruited from an urban academic general medicine practice.
Baseline data collection will include assessments of demographics and socioeconomic status,
clinical history and hypertension characteristics, depressive symptoms, perceived stress,
and medication adherence. Patients will be followed for 1 year, when final evaluations will
take place, including assessment of hypertension, stress, depression, medication adherence
and level of perceived racism (measured by a validated instrument). The primary outcome is
the change in medication adherence scores from baseline to 12 months. Statistical models
will be developed to determine if level of perceived racism is associated with medication
adherence, and whether stress and depression play a role in this relationship.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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