Accepted for/Published in: Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Date Submitted: Apr 15, 2024
Date Accepted: Nov 14, 2024
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Validation of the Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire (SMAQ) in people living with HIV in a National Hospital in Mexico
ABSTRACT
Background:
Adherence to antiretroviral therapy is a critical component in achieving viral suppression in people living with HIV in addition to increasing overall quality of life. Several indirect methods have been used to measure adherence including the SMAQ.
Objective:
The objective of this study is to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire (SMAQ) in men living with HIV/AIDS attending a Mexican national hospital.
Methods:
A cross-sectional analytical design study was carried out in a Mexican National Hospital in Jalisco, including men >18 years old with at least three months in antiretroviral treatment, excluding those with cognitive difficulties to answer the survey. A minimum sample of 100 subjects was calculated. The analysis included descriptive tests, confirmatory factor analysis, reliability and validity assessment, correlation between adherence and viral load, and association between viral load and adherence.
Results:
The final analysis included a total of 260 patients with a mean age of 43 years and an average of 9 years on ART. The SMAQ showed sufficient structural validity (CFI=1.000, RMSEA=0.000, CI90% 0.000-0.085) with satisfactory factor loadings on most questions except item 2. The reliability of the scale is acceptable (α=0.702, ω=0.718). Adherence correlated with viral load significantly but not with recent TCD4 lymphocyte levels. Patients classified as adherent were three times more likely to be undetectable than those classified as non-adherent (MR=3.31, 95%CI [1.13-9.64], p=0.042).
Conclusions:
The SMAQ represents an adequate tool to assess adherence in men in the Mexican context, this will contribute to the study and compression of adherence to establish future intervention programs.
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