Hyemin Cho,1,* Sohyun Jeong,2,3,* Cinoo Kang,4 Hee-Jin Kang,1 Suhyun Jang,1 Sunmee Jang1
1College of Pharmacy and Gachon Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Gachon University, Incheon, Republic of Korea; 2Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife, Boston, MA, USA; 3Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; 4Department of Biostatics and Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea
*These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence: Sunmee Jang
College of Pharmacy and Gachon Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Gachon University, 191 Hambakmoero, Yeonsu-Gu, Incheon 21936, South Korea
Tel +82-32-820-4941
Fax +82-32-820-4829
Email [email protected]
Background: Immigrants are vulnerable to suboptimal health care utilization including non-adherence of medication use. Thus, we aimed to identify the potential risk factors of non-adherence and evaluate whether utilizing a usual source of care was associated with medication adherence in immigrants.
Methods: We utilized the Korea National Health Insurance Claims Database between 2012 and 2015. Cases were immigrants who had antihypertensive prescriptions at the time of hypertension diagnosis in 2012. Controls were native-born Koreans with hypertension who were 1:1 matched to immigrants by age, sex, and Charlson comorbidity index. We used the medication possession ratio for three years to assess the adherence to antihypertensive drugs. The likelihood of non-adherence was evaluated between cases and controls by multivariate linear regression models stratified by age, sex, and number of clinic visits. We assessed the potential risk factors of non-adherence in immigrants by multivariate linear regression and logistic regression models, respectively.
Results: In total, 4114 immigrants and 4114 matched native-born Koreans with hypertension were included. The mean MPR was significantly lower in immigrants (56% vs 70%, p< 0.0001). Immigrants showed almost two times the level of non-adherence as native-born Koreans (odds ratio [OR], 2.01; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.83– 2.21). Stratified analyses on non-adherence presented the highest non-adherence (2.28 times) in immigrants in the younger group (30– 49 years old) and the lowest non-adherence in immigrants in 65 and old group where the risk was 1.69 times higher than native Korean with the same age. The absence of a usual source of care significantly increased medication non-adherence by 1.31 to 1.58 times among immigrants.
Conclusion: When the number of visited clinics increased, the degree of non-adherence increased consistently. Therefore, the systematization of registering with primary care (a usual source of care) might be a modifiable health care strategy to improve health care outcomes in immigrants.
Keywords: usual source of care, hypertension, immigrants, health care strategy
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