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Background: Cardiometabolic disorders are highly prevalent among people living with HIV, complicating the medication management of both conditions. Primary partners provide key sources of support for antiretroviral therapy; however, little research has considered their role in the context of comorbidities.
Purpose: Using baseline data from the Healthy Hearts cohort study, we investigated associations between relationship dynamics and dual medication adherence for HIV and hypertension (HTN) in Malawi.
Methods: Healthy Hearts is an observational cohort study with people living with HIV and either HTN or diabetes and their primary partners. Study assessments occur at baseline, 4, 8, and 12 months. We examined baseline data from participants with HIV and HTN on their adherence to medications, relationship quality (eg, closeness, intimate partner violence [IPV]), shared illness appraisal, and communal coping (eg, partner support, illness communication). Our outcome variable was a composite measure consisting of 4 categories: complete HIV/optimal HTN adherence (reference category), incomplete HIV/suboptimal HTN adherence, incomplete HIV/optimal HTN adherence, and complete HIV/suboptimal HTN adherence. Multinomial regression models tested for associations between relationship variables with dual medication adherence, controlling for covariates.
Results: Participants with HIV and HTN (N = 228) were split evenly on gender, 53 years on average, and most had a primary school education or less (70%). Compared to the group with higher HIV/HTN adherence, the odds of reporting incomplete HIV/suboptimal HTN adherence were associated with lower closeness, shared illness appraisal, couple communication, and partner support. Similar patterns were found for the incomplete HIV/optimal HTN adherence group, which was also associated with higher physical, sexual, and emotional IPV as compared to those in the reference group. Lower communication and partner support were associated with being in the complete HIV/suboptimal HTN adherence group.
Conclusions: Lower HIV or HTN adherence (or both) was associated with lower relationship quality and functioning, and IPV. Successful approaches that involve primary partners in disease management for HIV should be extended for cardiometabolic conditions such as HTN. The role of primary partners may be even more important in helping people successfully manage multiple competing health priorities such as HIV and HTN. Couple-based interventions should target dyadic processes such as relationship quality, illness communication, and disease-specific social support while also mitigating the potential harms of IPV on adherence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaaf052 | DOI Listing |
Cardiovasc Ther
September 2025
Department of Cardiology, Tianjin University Chest Hospital, Tianjin, China.
Hypertension constitutes a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Globally, the management and control of hypertension remain suboptimal. At present, pharmacological intervention is a critical strategy for patients with hypertension to achieve blood pressure regulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutrients
August 2025
3rd Department of Internal Medicine, Papageorgiou Hospital, Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Ring Road, Nea Efkarpia, GR-56403 Thessaloniki, Greece.
: In hypertension (HTN), lifestyle modification is important for controlling blood pressure (BP) and lipidemic profile. The HINTreat trial showed that an anti-inflammatory diet was associated with improved endothelial function, after six months of intensive nutritional treatment. : This post hoc analysis of the HINTreat trial examined how adherence to various nutritional patterns like the Mediterranean Diet (MedDiet), the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet, and anti-inflammatory diet, had impact on the blood lipids profile and the CVD risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo investigate the separate and combined associations of excess body weight (EBW), hypertension (HTN), and hypertriglyceridemia (HTG) with hyperglycemia among non-diabetic adults aged 60 years and above in regional China. In this cross-sectional study conducted in 2023, 26,769 non-diabetic individuals aged 60 years and older were selected from Nanjing municipality, China. Body weight and height, blood pressure, fasting plasma triglycerides, and glucose were objectively measured, while socio-demographic attributes, lifestyle and behaviors, and disease history were self-reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Behav Med
January 2025
Invest in Knowledge, Zomba, Malawi.
Background: Cardiometabolic disorders are highly prevalent among people living with HIV, complicating the medication management of both conditions. Primary partners provide key sources of support for antiretroviral therapy; however, little research has considered their role in the context of comorbidities.
Purpose: Using baseline data from the Healthy Hearts cohort study, we investigated associations between relationship dynamics and dual medication adherence for HIV and hypertension (HTN) in Malawi.