Poor Adherence to Oral Psychiatric Medication in Adults with Schizophrenia May Be
Influenced by Pharmacophobia, High Internal Health Locus of Control and Treatment
Duration.
Objective: This study in Spain, Argentina, and Venezuela included 212 schizophrenia
outpatients prescribed 387 psychiatric medications and 1,160 other psychiatric outpatients
prescribed 2,067 medications. Methods: Logistic regression models included adherence
for each psychiatric medication, measured by the Sidorkiewicz Adherence Tool, as the
dependent variable. The models provided adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of dichotomous
independent variables: 1) clinical variables, 2) subscales from the Patient Health
Beliefs Questionnaire on Psychiatric Treatment (presence/absence of pharmacophobia
and pharmacophilia and high/low psychological reactance, internal health locus of
control [HLOC] and doctor's HLOC) and 3) presence/absence of skepticism toward each
medication measured by the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ). Results: ORs
significant in both groups were: 1) pharmacophobia (OR=0.389 in schizophrenia, OR=0.591
in other patients and not significantly different) and 2) pharmacophilia (respectively
OR=2.18, OR=1.59 and significantly higher in schizophrenia: p=0.012). Prescribing
the medication for >1 year increased adherence in schizophrenia (OR=1.92) while decreasing
it in others (OR=0.687). Four ORs were significant in the schizophrenia group but
not in the controls: treatment for >1 year (OR=0.161), high internal LOC (OR=0.389),
extreme polypharmacy (OR=1.92) and the country of Spain (OR=0.575). Regarding antipsychotics,
the study included 204 schizophrenia patients prescribed 240 antipsychotic medications
and 301 other patients prescribed 315 antipsychotic drugs. Three ORs were significant
for antipsychotic adherence in the schizophrenia group: pharmacophobia (OR=0.324),
treatment for >1 year (OR=0.362), and skepticism about specific antipsychotics (OR=0.535).
Conclusions: Future adherence studies for antipsychotic/all medications should further
explore the specificity/commonality of these dimensions in schizophrenia versus other
psychiatric patients. (Neuropsychopharmacol Hung 2021; 23(4): 388-404).