Racial Disparities in Medication Adherence and the Patient-Provider Relationship: Does Racial/Ethnic Concordance Matter?

  • Alyson Ma
  • , Jason Campbell
  • , Alison Sanchez
  • , Steven Sumner
  • , Mindy Ma

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To examine the impact of patient-provider racial/ethnic concordance on adherence to a prescribed medication regimen in marginalized populations with a focus on health issues related to hypertension, heart condition/disease, elevated cholesterol, and diabetes. Study Setting and Design: Applying the Andersen-Newman Behavioral Model of Health Service Use, we estimate multivariate linear models to analyze the number of prescriptions filled by patients within a calendar year using publicly available data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS), a set of large-scale surveys of families and individuals, their medical providers, and employers across the United States. Data Sources and Analytic Sample: Data from MEPS on patient race/ethnicity and provider race/ethnicity were collected from survey years 2007 to 2017 as well as data to control for demographic, socioeconomic, and health factors. Our sample includes 238,355 observations, including 46.1% White respondents, 27.1% Hispanic respondents, 19.3% Black respondents, and 7.5% Asian respondents. There are 52,069 (about 22%) cases of patient-provider concordance. Principal Findings: We find a positive association between adherence to a prescribed medication regime and racial/ethnic patient-provider concordance. Patients identifying as non-White fill their prescriptions approximately three times less often than White patients. Relative to White patients in racial/ethnic concordance with their providers, there is an increase in the number of filled prescriptions for Black patients in racial/ethnic concordance with their providers (coef = 0.715; p = 0.02). For patients with hypertension, being in a racial/ethnic concordant relationship with their providers increases the number of prescription refills (White: coef = 1.884, p < 0.001; Black: coef = 2.360, p < 0.001; Hispanic: 1.925, p < 0.001; Asian: 1.461, p = 0.003). The number of prescription refills also increases for White (coef = 1.665, p < 0.001), Hispanic (coef = 3.469, p < 0.001), and Asian (3.796, p < 0.001) patients with heart condition/disease and in racial/ethnic concordance with their providers. Conclusions: The results provide evidence supporting that patients in racial/ethnic concordant relationships with their providers have a greater predisposition to medication adherence even after controlling for enabling, need, and other predisposing factors, particularly for patients with certain chronic medical diseases. Health policy implications are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70040
JournalHealth Services Research
Volume61
Issue number1
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Health Policy

Keywords

  • adherence
  • concordance
  • ethnicity
  • medication
  • race

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