Chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients with regular dialysis treatment for more than 3 months are called maintenance hemodialysis (MHD). The degree of patients' adherence with the doctor's advice to take medicine on time is called medication adherence, which is very important for the control of the disease and the improvement of the quality of life for MHD patients. Living alone, lack of communication with children and self-neglect are risk factors for medication adherence in the older adults. Inappropriate substance use behaviors are common among older adults with self-neglect. Family resilience denotes the ability of a family to retain the stability of its structure by relying on its internal and external resources when facing a difficult situation. Family resilience entails the combination of family beliefs, interaction styles, problem-solving skills, and emotional communication which reflect supportive and positive psychological adjustment effects to benefit older persons. This study aims to provide a theoretical basis for clinical intervention level to improve medication adherence of older patients on MHD through examineing the correlation among family resilience, self-neglect, and medication adherence based on the self-reports. A random sampling method was used to gather information from 632 older patients receiving MHD treatment in Hemodialysis Center of Hunan Province between July to December 2021. For this purpose, a self-designed demographic questionnaire, the Family Resilience Questionnaire (FRQ), the Scale of the Elderly Self-Neglect (SESN), and the Morisky Medication Adherence Scale-4 (MMAS-4) were used to investigate the questionnaire data of the participants. Pearson correlation was used to examine the relationship between family resilience, self-neglect, and medication adherence in older patients and gain insight into their current status. AMOS 24.0 was used for mediation modeling. Bootstrap mediation effect test was used to evaluate the mediation effect among the 3 variables. The questionnaires survey showed that the scores of FRQ, SESN, and MMAS-4 were 78.60±12.49, 7.99±5.60, and 5.93±1.40, respectively; and the medication adherence rate was 18.8%. Pearson correlation analysis showed that family resilience was negatively correlated with self-neglect (r=-0.432, P<0.001), and was positively correlated with medication adherence (r=0.169, P<0.001). Self-neglect was negatively correlated with medication adherence (r=-0.217, P<0.001). Mediating effect analysis showed that the total effect of family resilience on medication adherence was significant (β=0.214, 95% CI 0.121 to 0.313, P<0.001), and the direct effect was not significant (β=0.058, 95% CI -0.073 to 0.187, P>0.05). Self-neglect played a major mediating effect between family resilience and medication adherence (β=0.156, 95% CI 0.088 to 0.240, P<0.001). Family resilience, self-neglect, and medication adherence among older patients on MHD are significantly related, with family resilience primarily influencing medication adherence indirectly through self-neglect.
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