Abstract

Adolescents with psychiatric disorders may struggle with medication adherence and this can lead to ineffective treatment. Subjective factors, such as attitudes, beliefs, experiences, have a greater impact on adherence in adolescents than objective factors. To better understand these subjective attitudes, self-evaluation rating scales should be developed. The study aimed to develop two scales - Pediatric Medication Adherence Scale (PMAS) and Pediatric Attitudes toward Medication Scale (PAMS) - to assess adherence and attitudes toward medication for pediatric patients and their parents. Total of 288 pediatric patients (67% female) between the ages of 12-18 (mean [standard deviation] age of 15.25 [1.59] years) with psychiatric disorders and 255 parents (83.53% mothers) were administered the scales. The validity of the scales was evaluated through the content validity index and explanatory factor analyses. To evaluate reliability, Cronbach's alpha, and test-retest methods were utilized. The validity and reliability of the PMAS (9 questions for patients, 6 questions for parents) and PAMS (18 questions for patients, 20 questions for parents), Cronbach's alpha values and intraclass correlation coefficients were found above 0.7 for each scale and showed well establishment for this particular population. Analysis revealed that anxiety scores had a greater impact on total attitude scores than necessity scores (p < 0.05). Parent and patient adherence scores were similar, and negative parental attitudes toward medication were associated with lower patient adherence. The present study represents a novel attempt to design a medication adherence and attitude questionnaire for adolescents with psychiatric disorders, along with a parental version.

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