Adherence to antiretroviral drugs among AIDS patients in Sagamu, Nigeria

OA Ogundahunsi, OJ Daniel, OT Oladapo

Abstract


Adherence to drug therapy is crucial for drug efficacy and prevention of drug resistance. A cross-sectional study of 53 patients (40 receiving free medication and 13 on self purchased drugs) attending the Center for Special Studies clinic in Sagamu, Nigeria between September 1 and November 30, 2003 was carried out to determine the level of adherence and the factors associated with non adherence. Only patients who had been on ARV for at least 3 months were recruited into the study. An interview administered questionnaire was used to collect data on 7 day recall of drug use. The cost of a fixed combination of Nevirapine, zidovudine,(AZT) and Epivir (3TC) is between $75-80. There were 21 males and 32 females giving a male: female ratio of 1:1.5. The mean age of respondents was 40.5 years; the majority were Christians (79.2%), married (47.2%), and of lower socio-economic status (77.3%). The mean duration of use of ARV drugs was 20.3 months while the mean CD4 count was 262cells/ul. Overall, 79.2% achieved an adherence level of 95%. This optimal adherence rate was higher in the free-medication subset compared with the self-purchased subset, although the difference was not statistically significant. [34 (85%) against 8 (61.5%); X2=3.28; P=0.069)]. The most common reason for non adherence was the inability to afford the drugs. Socio-demographic variables, number of pills/day were not significant predictors of non-adherence. Adherence to HAART treatment is high in the study population. The cost of the drugs was the most important reason given for non-adherence. Governments of resource-poor countries and the pharmaceutical industry should explore ways to subsidize the cost of ARV so that PLWHAs can have access to ARV and improve adherence.

 


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