Volume 20, Issue 4 , Pages 316-325, July 2009
Telephone Nurse Counseling Improves HIV Medication Adherence: An Effectiveness Study
Antiretroviral therapy remains a challenge for persons living with HIV (PLWH), who must maintain high levels of adherence to prevent viral resistance and treatment failure. This effectiveness study examined a telephonic nursing program to translate well-validated cognitive-behavioral and motivational interviewing adherence counseling into routine clinical care. Participants were 98 PLWH who were followed for up to 6 months after recruitment from HIV care settings across the United States. Each participant received telephone counseling (Mdn =
three sessions) from a trained nurse who followed up with the participant over time. Nurses assessed participants' readiness for adherence, provided support to overcome identified barriers, and offered information based on participants' questions. At 6 months after the start of treatment, a greater percentage of participants had adherence at or above 95% than expected for this population, based on a clinical interview. Self-efficacy was related to baseline medication adherence, whereas other clinical and demographic variables were not. Attrition was a concern but was unrelated to adherence, self-efficacy, or clinical severity measures. Telephone counseling was associated with a relatively high percentage of participants reaching target antiretroviral therapy adherence levels and may be an effective method to disseminate psychologically based counseling into a broad range of care settings.
Key words: adherence, counseling, HIV, medication, self-efficacy
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PII: S1055-3290(09)00067-3
doi:10.1016/j.jana.2009.02.008
© 2009 Association of Nurses in AIDS Care. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 20, Issue 4 , Pages 316-325, July 2009
