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144075

Illness Perceptions, Beliefs about Medication and Blood Pressure Control Among Hypertensive Egyptian Cohort

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Objectives: To assess medication adherence, illness perception, beliefs about medications,
to examine their association with blood pressure control among patients in Zagazig
University hospital. Method: A cross-sectional study was held on 259 hypertensive
patients attending Internal Medicine outpatient clinic, Zagazig University hospital. They
underwent complete history taking, comprehensive clinical examination comprising
assessing of their blood pressure. Then the patients completed Modified Morisky scale-8
(MMS-8), brief illness perception (BIPQ) and belief about medication (BMQ)
questionnaires. Results: About 55% and 58% reported poor blood pressure control and
medication adherence respectively. There is statistically significant relation between blood
pressure control and patients' sex, education, occupation, medication number, IPR causal
domain, family history of hypertension-induced mortality, BIPR score, general overuse,
specific necessity, specific concern, and adherence. There were significant relations
between adherence and patients' sex, social class, marital status, education, occupation,
duration, medications number, family history of hypertension-induced mortality, IPQ
causal item, general overuse, specific concern, and necessity. Significant risk factors of
both poor control and medication adherence included specific necessity ≤ 9, general
overuse >15 and using 3 to 4 drugs. Male, not working/unskilled increased risk of poor
control. Not working/unskilled workers and skilled worker/free business, disease duration
>5 years, perceiving lifestyle and hereditary as hypertension causes, having secondary
education or higher were significant protectors from poor adherence. Conclusion: Belief
about medications and illness perception were among the predictors of poor medication
adherence and blood pressure control as well. Both can affect blood pressure control
directly or indirectly via influencing adherence.

DOI

10.21608/ejcm.2021.144075

Keywords

perception, beliefs, adherence

Volume

39

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

21319

Issue Date

2021-01-01

Receive Date

2021-01-28

Publish Date

2021-01-01

Page Start

50

Page End

64

Print ISSN

1110-1865

Online ISSN

2090-2611

Link

https://ejcm.journals.ekb.eg/article_144075.html

Detail API

https://ejcm.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=144075

Order

6

Type

Original Article

Type Code

234

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Journal of Community Medicine

Publication Link

https://ejcm.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023