2009
DOI: 10.1080/09540120802511968
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Intentionality of medication non-adherence among individuals living with HIV/AIDS in Hong Kong

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Cited by 37 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
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“…Intentional nonadherence includes an active decision-making process to disregard professional advice, whereas unintentional or inadvertent nonadherence involves a passive process which is less strongly associated with beliefs and cognitions [92,94]. Only one study in the present review differentiated between these two types of nonadherence and found differential associations with stigma [55]. Clarifying differences in intentional and unintentional nonadherence will be critical in understanding the role of HIV-related stigma as a barrier to adherence.…”
Section: Medication Adherencementioning
confidence: 85%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Intentional nonadherence includes an active decision-making process to disregard professional advice, whereas unintentional or inadvertent nonadherence involves a passive process which is less strongly associated with beliefs and cognitions [92,94]. Only one study in the present review differentiated between these two types of nonadherence and found differential associations with stigma [55]. Clarifying differences in intentional and unintentional nonadherence will be critical in understanding the role of HIV-related stigma as a barrier to adherence.…”
Section: Medication Adherencementioning
confidence: 85%
“…In Dlamini et al's investigation with PLWH in five African countries, participants who were adherent had lower stigma scores at baseline and experienced a steeper decline in stigma over time than participants who were non-adherent [54]. Additionally, in a sample of Chinese PLWH, Mo and Mak demonstrated that higher stigma scores at baseline predicted intentional nonadherence, compared to adherence and unintentional nonadherence, at 6-month follow up [55].…”
Section: Studies That Combined Multiple Dimensions Of Stigmamentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Both intentional and unintentional nonadherence has been studied in patients with chronic illness including: asthma, lupus, hypertension, and breast cancer (Atkins & Fallowfield, 2006; Daleboudt, Broadbent, McQueen & Kaptein, 2010; Lehane & McCarthey, 2007; Lowry, Dudley, Oddone & Bosworkth, 2005; Wroe, 2002). This area of study has been limited in PLWHA (Mo & Mak, 2009; Norton et al, 2010; Wroe & Thomas, 2003). Mo and Mak (2009) investigated factors associated with adherence, intentional nonadherence, and unintentional nonadherence among PLWHA in Hong Kong.…”
Section: Intentional and Unintentional Adherencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…214 As discussed in Section 1.4, patients are non-adherent due to many different reasons, and may be subjected to different types of non-adherence concurrently (Section 1.2.4). 1,18,87,89,90,93,96,100,114,115,145,147 Both are important to consider when selecting an appropriate intervention to address non-adherence. 33 Identifying the reasons for nonadherence facilitates a strategy to address these reasons, which can be described as a tailored intervention.…”
Section: Self-report Adherence Scalesmentioning
confidence: 99%