Utility of the health belief model in examining medication compliance among psychiatric outpatients
This study investigates the relationship between health beliefs and medication compliance among a group of psychiatric outpatients who were prescribed antipsychotic drug regimens. The method of study was an interview with 107 outpatients discharged from two Veterans Administration Medical Centers. The health belief model (HBM) served as an organizing framework to explore the relationships among perceptions of illness severity, susceptibility, benefits and barriers of treatment, cues to action, and medication compliance. The results provide a systematic description of health beliefs reported by psychiatric outpatients. Analyses examine the ability of beliefs to predict compliance and affirm the model's theoretical cogency and appropriateness for use with psychiatric outpatients. Regression analysis showed that 20% of the total variance in compliance could be explained when all components of the HBM were examined together. The study supported the concepts that psychiatric outpatients hold identifiable patterns of health beliefs and attitudes and that the health belief framework functions best when utilized as an integrated model to examine compliance.
Year of publication: |
1987
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Authors: | Kelly, Gerard R. ; Mamon, Joyce A. ; Scott, Jack E. |
Published in: |
Social Science & Medicine. - Elsevier, ISSN 0277-9536. - Vol. 25.1987, 11, p. 1205-1211
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | health beliefs medication compliance psychiatric outpatients |
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