Interactive effects of social support and social conflict on medication adherence in multimorbid older adults
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 17:02authored byWarner, LM, Benjamin SchuezBenjamin Schuez, Aiken, L, Ziegelmann, JP, Wurm, S, Tesch-Romer, C, Schwarzer, R
With increasing age and multimorbidity, medication regimens become demanding, potentially resulting in suboptimal adherence. Social support has been discussed as a predictor of adherence, but previous findings are inconsistent. The study examines general social support, medication-specific social support, and social conflict as predictors of adherence at two points in time (6 months apart) to test the mobilization and social conflict hypotheses. A total of 309 community-dwelling multimorbid adults (65–85 years, mean age 73.27, 41.7% women; most frequent illnesses: hypertension, osteoarthritis and hyperlipidemia) were recruited from the population-representative German Ageing Survey. Only medication-specific support correlated with adherence. Controlling for baseline adherence, demographics, physical fitness, medication regimen, and attitude, Time 1 medication-specific support negatively predicted Time 2 adherence, and vice versa. The negative relation between earlier medication-specific support and later adherence was not due to mobilization (low adherence mobilizing support from others, which over time would support adherence). Social conflict moderated the medication-specific support to adherence relationship: the relationship became more negative, the more social conflict participants reported. Presence of social conflict should be considered when received social support is studied, because well-intended help might have the opposite effect, when it coincides with social conflict.
History
Publication title
Social Science & Medicine
Volume
87
Issue
2013
Pagination
23-30
ISSN
0277-9536
Department/School
School of Psychological Sciences
Publisher
Pergamon
Place of publication
The Boulevard, Langford Lane, Kidlington, Oxford, England, Ox5 1Gb