Race: an explanation of patient compliance--fact or fiction? | Academic Article individual record
abstract

This article describes a retrospective study that examines the relationship between patient compliance and race among diagnosed hypertensives in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES II). The study reviewed and analyzed the compliance of 403 blacks diagnosed with hypertension. Patient compliance was measured using the frequency that patients took their hypertensive medicine. Bivariate analysis revealed a statistically significant relationship with patient compliance (dependent) and the independent variables (age, education, gender, and smoking). Multiple regression for the black population revealed that the age of the person accounted for the most explained variance. As age increased among blacks, so did compliance. The results may suggest the need to target school-aged blacks early in order to increase the awareness and importance of monitoring one's blood pressure. The results also may indicate that race is not a marker for other characteristics (income, education, etc) that might be used to explain the difference in the prevalence of hypertension among blacks compared with whites.

authors
publication outlet

Journal of the National Medical Association

author list (cited authors)
Daniels, D. E., Rene, A. A., & Daniels, V. R
publication date
1994
keywords
  • Patient Compliance
  • Race
  • Hypertension
citation count

26

PubMed ID
8151719
identifier
95337SE
start page
20
end page
25
volume
86
issue
1