Motivational interviewing to support antiretroviral therapy adherence: The role of quality counseling

TitleMotivational interviewing to support antiretroviral therapy adherence: The role of quality counseling
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsThrasher, AD, Golin, CE, Earp, JAL, Tien, H, Porter, C, Howie, L
JournalPatient Education and Counseling
Volume62
Pagination64-71
PublisherElsevier Science
Place PublishedNetherlands
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number0738-3991
Accession Number2006-08109-010. First Author & Affiliation: Thrasher, Angela D.
Keywordsadherence: counseling quality, Antiretroviral Therapy, Counseling, interviewing, Motivation, motivational interviewing, treatment compliance
Abstract

Objective: Although research linking motivational interviewing (MI) to behavior change exists, few studies report on MI's quality or explore how it may influence effectiveness. We studied MI quality and adherence to antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the context of a randomized, controlled trial. Methods: We used a structured instrument to code MI sessions and then correlated ART adherence (measured by electronic bottle cap monitor and pill count data at study exit) with specific counseling behaviors and the proportion of interactions that achieved quality benchmarks. Results: The sample (n = 47) was predominantly male (79%), minority (90%), had a mean age of 40, and averaged 79% adherence at exit. On three of five benchmarks, most MI sessions achieved the targeted quality level: 100% achieved them for MI-consistent statements; 85% for complex reflections; 63% for reflections to questions ratio; 44% for global therapist rating; 19% for using open-ended questions. ART adherence was positively associated with the ratio of reflections to questions (r = .39, p = .02), affirming statements (r = .38, p = .02), and negatively associated with closed-ended questions (r = -.33, p = .04). Discussion: Good quality MI can be conducted within the structure of a controlled trial but was generally not associated with ART adherence. Conclusion: Documenting treatment fidelity is critical to judging the efficacy of MI-based interventions. Practice implications: Regular feedback and close monitoring are needed to maintain MI quality. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract)

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