J Nephrol. 2025 Aug 19. doi: 10.1007/s40620-025-02387-2. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Person-centered care and trust in physicians influence medication adherence among dialysis patients. However, the mechanisms linking person-centered care to medication adherence, particularly the mediating effect of trust in physicians, remain unclear. This study investigated the interrelationships between person-centered care, trust in physicians, and medication adherence.
METHODS: Using a multicenter cross-sectional study of Japanese adults receiving outpatient hemodialysis at six dialysis centers, person-centered care was assessed using the 13-item Japanese Primary Care Assessment Tool-Short Form (JPCAT-SF), which included longitudinality and care coordination. Trust in physicians was measured using the five-item Wake Forest Physician Trust Scale. Medication adherence was measured using the 12-item Adherence Starts Knowledge (ASK-12) scale. General linear models examined person-centered care, physician trust, and medication adherence relationships. Mediation analysis determined how much trust in physicians mediated the person-centered care-medication adherence relationship.
RESULTS: A total of 483 patients, with median age and dialysis vintage of 71.9 and 5.7 years, respectively, were included in the analysis. High-quality person-centered care was associated with lower barriers to medication adherence in a dose-response manner across JPCAT-SF quartiles compared to no usual source of care. Trust in physicians partially mediated this relationship in a dose-response pattern, with the proportion of the indirect effect increasing from 16.1% (95% CI 4.5-33.8%) in Q2 to 33.3% (95% CI 17.4-65.5%) in Q4. Similar findings were observed for person-centered care subdomains.
CONCLUSIONS: High-quality person-centered care was associated with medication adherence, with trust in physicians playing a key mediating role. Strategies to enhance medication adherence in hemodialysis patients should incorporate multidimensional person-centered care approaches, building trust and strengthening continuity and care coordination.
PMID:40828491 | DOI:10.1007/s40620-025-02387-2