Personal Health Record Use and Its Association with Antiretroviral Adherence: Survey and Medical Record Data from 1871 US Veterans Infected with HIV

被引:0
作者
D. Keith McInnes
Stephanie L. Shimada
Sowmya R. Rao
Ann Quill
Mona Duggal
Allen L. Gifford
Cynthia A. Brandt
Thomas K. Houston
Michael E. Ohl
Kirsha S. Gordon
Kristin M. Mattocks
Lewis E. Kazis
Amy C. Justice
机构
[1] VA QUERI Program and VA New England Healthcare System,Department of Quantitative Health Sciences
[2] Bedford VA Medical Center,undefined
[3] Boston University School of Public Health,undefined
[4] University of Massachusetts Medical School,undefined
[5] Yale University School of Medicine,undefined
[6] Iowa City VAMC,undefined
[7] University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics,undefined
[8] VA Connecticut Healthcare System,undefined
[9] VA Central Western Massachusetts Healthcare System,undefined
[10] Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health,undefined
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2013年 / 17卷
关键词
HIV; Medication adherence; Health informatics; Internet; Personal health record; Veterans;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Patient electronic personal health record (PHR) use has been associated with improved patient outcomes in diabetes and depression care. Little is known about the effect of PHR use on HIV care processes and outcomes. We evaluated whether there was an association between patient PHR use and antiretroviral adherence. Data came from the Veterans Aging Cohort Study and included cross-sectional survey and medical record data from 1871 HIV+ veterans. Our adherence measure was an antiretroviral medication possession ratio, dichotomized at 0.90, and based on pharmacy refill data. In our sample 44 % did not use the internet, 14 % used internet but not for health, 27 % used internet for health but not the PHR, and 14 % used the PHR. In multivariable analysis PHR use was associated with ≥90 % adherence after controlling for socio-demographic variables. Findings provide support for longitudinal studies and studies that identify which PHR functions (e.g. online medication refills, viewing lab results, secure messaging with providers) are most closely associated with medication adherence.
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页码:3091 / 3100
页数:9
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