Figures
Abstract
Background
Functional social support has a stronger association with medical treatment adherence than structural social support in several populations and disease conditions. Using a contemporary U.S. population of adults treated with medications for coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors, the association between social support and medication adherence was examined.
Methods
We included 17,113 black and white men and women with CHD or CHD risk factors aged ≥45 years recruited 2003–2007 from the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study. Participants reported their perceived social support (structural social support: being partnered, number of close friends, number of close relatives, and number of other adults in household; functional social support: having a caregiver in case of sickness or disability; combination of structural and functional social support: number of close friends or relatives seen at least monthly). Medication adherence was assessed using a 4-item scale. Multi-variable adjusted Poisson regression models were used to calculate prevalence ratios (PR) for the association between social support and medication adherence.
Results
Prevalence of medication adherence was 68.9%. Participants who saw >10 close friends or relatives at least monthly had higher prevalence of medication adherence (PR = 1.06; 95% CI: 1.00, 1.11) than those who saw ≤3 per month. Having a caregiver in case of sickness or disability, being partnered, number of close friends, number of close relatives, and number of other adults in household were not associated with medication adherence after adjusting for covariates.
Citation: Mondesir FL, Carson AP, Durant RW, Lewis MW, Safford MM, Levitan EB (2018) Association of functional and structural social support with medication adherence among individuals treated for coronary heart disease risk factors: Findings from the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study. PLoS ONE 13(6): e0198578. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198578
Editor: Tomi F. Akinyemiju, University of Kentucky, UNITED STATES
Received: December 13, 2017; Accepted: May 22, 2018; Published: June 27, 2018
Copyright: © 2018 Mondesir et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: This study uses data from REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) cohort. In order to abide by its obligations with NIH/NINDS and the Institutional Review Board of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, REGARDS facilitates data sharing through formal data use agreements. Any investigator is welcome to access the REGARDS data through this process. Any investigator interested in accessing the data may complete a manuscript proposal as per NIH requirements to obtain de-identified data. Requests for data access may be sent to regardsadmin@uab.edu.
Funding: The REGARDS study is supported by a cooperative agreement U01 NS041588 from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Service. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke or the National Institutes of Health. Representatives of the funding agency have been involved in the review of the manuscript but not directly involved in the collection, management, analysis, or interpretation of the data. The authors thank the other investigators, the staff, and the participants of the REGARDS study for their valuable contributions. A full list of participating REGARDS investigators and institutions can be found at http://www.regardsstudy.org. This work was also supported by American Heart Association Greater Southeast Affiliate Grant 16PRE29640015 (MONDESIR); received by FLM. The authors are solely responsible for the design and conduct of this study, all study analyses, the drafting and editing of the manuscript, and its final contents. A.P.C. receives funding from Amgen for unrelated work, R.W.D receives funding from Amgen and Amarin for unrelated work, M.M.S receives funding from Amgen and diaDexus for unrelated work, E.B.L receives funding from Amgen for unrelated work and has consulted for Amgen and Novartis. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: I have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: F.L.M receives funding from the American Heart Association Predoctoral Fellowship, A.P.C. receives funding from Amgen for unrelated work, R.W.D receives funding from Amgen and Amarin for unrelated work, M.W.L. has no relationships to disclose, M.M.S receives funding from Amgen and diaDexus for unrelated work, E.B.L receives funding from Amgen for unrelated work and has consulted for Amgen and Novartis. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
Introduction
Medications can reduce the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) events and mortality among people with known CHD and/or CHD risk factors such as diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia [1–3]. However, a meta-analysis indicated that only 50 to 66% of patients were adherent to cardiovascular medications [4]. Some evidence suggests that social support promotes medication adherence in chronic disease management [5–10]. Social networks provide social support via a series of relationships and interconnectedness through which members influence each other’s behaviors by their daily interactions and feedback mechanisms [11]. These networks may increase treatment adherence through support received from relatives and friends as well as assistance provided for self-care activities [9]. However, social network members may discourage others from using certain medications, thereby reducing adherence [11].
Social support has been conceptualized as consisting of functional support, structural support, and informational support [6, 12, 13]. Functional social support includes practical help provided by an individual’s social network (e.g., providing transportation to doctor’s visits, saying encouraging words, providing care during illness) [6, 12, 13]. Structural social support refers to the number and types of connection within an individual’s social network (e.g., social network size, living arrangement, marital status) [6, 12, 13]. Informational support is the knowledge provided to an individual through their social network (e.g., providing reading material about a recent diagnosis) [6, 12, 13]. In two prior meta-analyses, functional social support was more strongly associated with treatment adherence than structural social support [6, 14]. It is unclear whether functional and structural social support affect medication adherence specifically among those with CHD risk factors other than diabetes.
In addition, how social networks operate and how social support is received may vary by race and gender. Prior studies have found that black households may have more members compared to white households to mitigate costs due to low income [12, 15, 16], blacks depend more on informal social networks for chronic disease management than whites [12, 17–19], and blacks generally have lower medication adherence compared to whites [20–24]. Moreover, differences by gender have been reported with men being more likely to report more support from their partners while women were more likely to receive support from their friends, relatives, and peers [25–27].
The aim of the present study is to investigate the associations between perceived functional and structural social support and medication adherence in a large population of black and white men and women treated with medications for CHD risk factors. Additionally, we examined whether the associations between perceived social support and medication adherence varied by race and, separately, by gender.
Methods
Study population
The REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study is a cohort of 30,239 English-speaking, community-dwelling, black and white adults age 45 and older who lived in the 48 contiguous U.S. at enrollment between 2003–2007 [28]. The REGARDS study was designed to investigate racial and regional variations in stroke mortality, and oversampled black individuals and people living in the U.S. stroke buckle (coastal regions of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia) and the rest of the stroke belt (remaining areas of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia and Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee) [28]. The Institutional Review Boards at participating centers approved the study protocol, and all participants provided written informed consent [28].
Data collection
Information about socio-demographic factors, cardiovascular disease risk factors, cigarette smoking, physical activity, use of medications, and psychosocial factors including perceived social support, depressive symptoms, and stress was obtained via computer assisted telephone interviews [28, 29]. Trained health professionals conducted an in-home visit to obtain systolic and diastolic blood pressure, weight and height measurements and blood and spot urine samples [29]. Fasting was requested for 10–12 hours before the in-home visit [28]. Blood and urine samples were shipped overnight with ice packs to a central laboratory at the University of Vermont and lipid profiles and glucose were obtained from laboratory assays performed on blood samples [28, 29]. Prescription and nonprescription medication use in the two weeks prior to the in-home visit was recorded by pill bottle review [28].
Sample selection
For the current analyses, participants were included if they had medication-treated diabetes (use of anti-diabetes medications), hypertension (use of antihypertensive medication), or dyslipidemia (use of lipid lowering medications) and/or prevalent CHD (self-reported history or electrocardiogram [ECG] evidence of a prior myocardial infarction [MI] or self-reported coronary artery bypass graft, coronary angioplasty, or coronary stenting) and use of CHD-related medications (nitrates, nitroglycerin, clopidogrel or use of aspirin to reduce risk of MI or stroke). Participants were excluded because of data anomalies (n = 56), missing data on social support components (n = 1,985), or medication adherence (n = 517), if they were missing data on conditions of interest (diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia and/or prevalent CHD) or use of medications for the conditions (n = 5,242) and did not have the conditions of interest or use medications for these conditions (n = 5,326) (Fig 1). After exclusions, the sample size was 17,113 participants. Participants excluded because of missing data were more likely to be younger (64.0 years vs 66.2 years), black (41.7% vs 44.6%), have health insurance (9.1% vs 5.1%), take fewer medications (4.2 vs 7.1), have a higher mean PCS score (47.4 vs 44.7) and less likely to be female (51.5% vs 53.8%), to have prevalent CHD (18.3% vs 28.9%) and be obese (36.6% vs 44.3%) compared to those included in the study (Table A in S1 File). Participants excluded because they did not have conditions of interest or use of medications for the conditions were more likely to be younger (61.9 years vs 66.2 years), female (64.6% vs 53.8%), have health insurance (8.1% vs 5.1%), take fewer medications (3.5 vs 7.1), have a higher mean PCS score (50.4 vs 44.7) and less likely to be black (31.2% vs 44.6%), to have prevalent CHD (7.0% vs 28.9%) and to be obese (22.0% vs 44.3%) compared to those included in the study (Table A in S1 File).
Exposures
Six survey items were used to measure perceived social support. Each social support component was considered as a separate exposure variable. Consistent with prior literature [6, 12, 13], social support was further divided into three types: functional support, structural support and a combination of functional and structural support.
Functional support.
One item was used to measure functional support.
- Care during illness or disability status
Participants were asked, “If you had a serious illness or became disabled, do you have someone who would be able to provide care for you on an on going basis?” This item was dichotomized as (care during illness or disability vs no one to care during illness or disability).
Structural support.
Four items were used to measure structural support.
- Partnered status
This was based on whether participants were married or in a marriage-like relationship vs divorced, widowed, separated, never been married. This was dichotomized as partnered vs not partnered respectively. - Number of close friends.
Participants were asked, “How many close friends do you have? That is, people that you feel at ease with, can talk to about private matters, and can call on for help?” This was categorized based on quartiles as 0–2 close friends, 3–4 close friends, 5–6 close friends, and >6 close friends. - Number of close relatives
Participants were asked, “How many relatives do you have that you feel close to?” This was categorized based on quartiles as 0–3 close relatives, 4–5 close relatives, 6–10 close relatives, and >10 close relatives. - Number of other adults in household
Participants were asked, “Not counting yourself, how many adults, age 18 or older currently live in the same household with you?” Because of limited variation in this item, it was divided into tertiles as 0 other adults in household, 1 other adult in household, and >1 other adult in household.
Combination of functional and structural support.
One item included a combination of functional and structural support.
- Frequency of contacts
Participants were asked “How many of these friends or relatives do you see at least once a month?” This was categorized based on quartiles as seeing 0–3 close friends or relatives at least monthly, seeing 4–5 close friends or relatives at least monthly, seeing 6–10 close friends or relatives at least monthly, and seeing >10 close friends or relatives at least monthly.
Outcome
Medication adherence was assessed using a four-item scale (30). Participants responded yes or no to the following questions: 1) “Do you ever forget to take your medicines?”; 2) “Are you careless at times about taking your medicine?”; 3) “When you feel better, do you sometimes stop taking your medicine?” and 4) “Sometimes if you feel worse when you start taking the medicine, do you stop taking it?” The outcome was categorized as low adherence (at least one “yes” response) and high adherence (no “yes” responses), consistent with prior literature [30].
Covariates
Access to medications results from interaction between individuals and the health system, thus the Andersen and Aday conceptual model was selected to guide the analysis. This model proposed that individual and contextual characteristics determine how and if an individual uses health services; these characteristics are categorized into predisposing, enabling, and need factors [31].
Pre-disposing factors.
The pre-disposing factors included in the analyses were age (continuous), race (black vs. white), gender (male vs. female), region of residence (Stroke Buckle vs. Stroke Belt vs. Non-Belt), annual household income (<$20,000 vs. ≥$20,000) and education (high school graduate or less vs. some college or college graduate).
Enabling factors.
The enabling factors available for these analyses were insurance status (yes vs. no), rural status based on Rural Urban Commuting Area [RUCA] Codes [32], (rural vs. not rural) and percentage of individuals in a zip code living below the federal poverty line (continuous).
Need factors.
The need factors were cumulative number of medications (continuous), depressive symptoms based on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies–Depression Scale [CES-D] (CES-D score <4 vs. ≥4), physical functioning based on the Short Form 12 Physical Component Summary [PCS] score [33] (continuous), mental health based on the Short Form 12 Mental Health Component Summary (MCS) score [33] (continuous), Cohen’s perceived stress scale [34] score (continuous), general health (excellent/very good vs good vs fair/poor), obesity status based on BMI (kg/m2) estimated from measured height and weight during the in-home visit (obese vs not obese), physical activity (none vs. 1–3 times per week vs. ≥4 times per week) and Framingham CHD risk score: risk of coronary death or MI over 10 years among those free of CHD at baseline [35, 36] [(<10% vs 10–20% vs >20%) vs prevalent CHD].
Statistical analysis
Participant characteristics and social support components were compared by medication adherence status (low versus high adherence) using descriptive statistics. Multivariable-adjusted Poisson regression models with robust variance estimation were used to calculate prevalence ratios (PRs) for high medication adherence for each measure of social support as follows: 1. care during illness or disability vs no one to care during illness or disability; 2. partnered vs not partnered; 3. quartiles for number of close friends with 0–2 close friends as the reference; 4. quartiles for number of close relatives with 0–3 close relatives as the reference; 5. quartiles for number of close friends or relatives seen at least monthly with seeing 0–3 close friends or relatives at least monthly as the reference, and 6. tertiles for number of other adults in household with 0 other adults in household as the reference.
First a crude model was analyzed for each exposure variable. Then, sequential adjustments were made using three models for each exposure variable based on the Andersen and Aday conceptual model [31]. The crude model was adjusted for pre-disposing factors (age, race, gender region of residence, annual household income and education) to create model 1. Model 2 was created by further adjusting model 1 for enabling factors (insurance status, rural status and percentage of individuals in a zip code living below the federal poverty line). Model 2 was further adjusted for need factors (cumulative number of medications, depressive symptoms, MCS score, perceived stress scale score, general health, obesity status, physical activity, and CHD risk category) to create model 3. Race and gender were tested separately to determine whether they were effect modifiers of the associations between high medication adherence and each of the six exposures using cross-product (interaction) terms. Multivariable-adjusted Poisson regression models with robust variance estimation as above were used to estimate PRs for high medication adherence separately for each race and gender. Multiple imputation by chained equations with ten datasets was used to account for missing covariate data [37]. The data was analyzed using SAS, version 9.4, SAS Institute, Cary, NC.
Results
Among the 17,113 participants, the prevalence of high medication adherence was 68.9%. Participants with high medication adherence were more likely to be rural residents (20.5% vs 18.5%), to have higher mean PCS (45.0 vs 43.9) and MCS scores (54.6 vs 53.0), fewer depressive symptoms (10.3% vs 14.3%), and less perceived stress (3.0 vs 3.6) compared to participants with low medication adherence (Table 1).
In the crude analysis, participants with high medication adherence were more likely to report having someone to care for them during illness or disability (87.1% vs 84.4%), >6 close friends (24.4% vs 22.5%), >10 close relatives (16.3% vs 15.3%), to see >10 close friends or relatives at least monthly (20.5% vs 17.6%) and less likely to have >1 other adult in the household (15.4% vs 17.8%) compared to those with low medication adherence (Table 2). Compared to participants who reported seeing 0–3 close friends or relatives at least monthly, the PRs of high medication adherence for those who reported seeing 4–5 friends or relatives at least monthly, 6–10 friends or relatives at least monthly and >10 friends or relatives at least monthly were 1.03 (95% CI: 0.98, 1.09), 1.03 (95% CI: 0.99, 1.08) and 1.06 (95% CI: 1.00, 1.11) respectively, after multivariable adjustment (Table 3).
Black participants were more likely to have >1 other adult in the household compared to white participants (p <0.001) (Table B in S1 File). Women were less likely to have someone to care for them during illness or disability (p <0.001) or to be partnered (p <0.001) and were more likely to have no other adults in the household (p <0.001), compared to men (Table C in S1 File). The associations between the social support components and medication adherence were similar between groups defined by race and gender (P-values for interaction >0.10 for all exposure-effect modifier combinations) (Tables D and E in S1 File).
Discussion
In this study of adults with CHD risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia and/or prevalent CHD), the number of close friends or relatives seen at least monthly, a combination of functional and structural support, was modestly associated with higher medication adherence. The other measures of perceived social support assessed in this study, were not associated with medication adherence, once factors known to influence health services utilization were accounted for. However, overall, the prevalence of high medication adherence was notable (68.9%) given the high-risk status of this population.
Two meta-analyses indicated that functional social support had a stronger association with treatment adherence (medication adherence and adherence to other self-care activities) compared to structural social support in adults and children with a range of conditions including hypertension [6, 14]. The current study added new data which suggests that the combination of functional and structural social support via interactions with close friends or relatives may have a greater impact on medication adherence compared to other measures of functional or structural social support. Collectively, these results suggest that the quality of relationships may have a greater impact on medication adherence compared to the number of individuals in one’s social network [6]. The mechanisms behind this are unclear; it has been proposed that functional support received from relatives or friends as well as assistance provided for self-care activities facilitates medication adherence [9]. This functional support further aids individuals to cope and to be motivated and optimistic about different aspects of self-management of their chronic conditions [6, 9, 38]. As a result of supportive interactions that lead to better coping, suggested interventions to improve medication adherence include encouraging social network members to assist non-adherent members with prescription refills and pill reminders [11].
The current study may have had limited power to detect clinically important variations by race and gender in the associations between social support and medication adherence. Prior studies have found differences in the associations between social support and chronic disease self-management activities by race and gender. One study found that among women, diabetes-specific social support was associated with an increased prevalence of medication adherence among people with diabetes; however, among men, social support was not associated with medication adherence [39]. In another study, Rees and colleagues found that the association between social support and diabetes self-management activities differed by race [40]. However, medication adherence was not assessed in this study.
The strengths of the current study include the availability of data on a four-item medication adherence scale, social support components, health-related and socio-economic variables on a large population of black and white men and women from the 48 contiguous US states.
The current study has several potential limitations. This was a cross-sectional study; therefore, it was not possible to determine the temporality sequence between social support components and medication adherence. The cross-sectional nature of the study further limits our ability to make causal inferences regarding whether social support directly influences medication adherence. Since social support and medication adherence were both self-reported, it is possible that misclassification may have resulted. However, the four-item medication adherence scale used in the current analysis has been widely used, including in prior studies using the REGARDS data to evaluate anti-hypertensive medication [41] and statin [42] adherence. We relied on the participants’ perceptions of social support; we did not have information about whether unexpected support may have been provided in times of need. Further, the reporting of both social support and medication adherence may be affected by social desirability bias. Additionally, only one measure of functional support was available; therefore, this limits the ability to make further conclusions regarding the association between functional support and medication adherence. Some covariates relied also on self-report, which could have increased the potential for misclassification. Although a variety of confounders were accounted for, there was potential for residual confounding.
Conclusions
The results of the current study indicate that among people with CHD risk factors, frequent contact with close friends or relatives (which comprises a combination of functional and structural social support) had a small association with medication adherence. Enhancing combined functional and structural social support for people with CHD risk factors such as diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia and prevalent CHD may help improve their medication adherence.
Supporting information
S1 File. Supporting tables.
Table A. Characteristics of REGARDS participants by sample inclusion/exclusion status Table B. Social support components by race Table C. Social support components by gender Table D. Adjusted Models with prevalence ratios and 95% confidence intervals of high medication adherence by social support components among blacks and whites Table E. Adjusted Models with odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals of high medication adherence by social support components among women and men.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198578.s001
(DOC)
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