Instrument details

Instrument Title

Been Self-reported Adherence Questionnaire

View PDF - Self-report_Been.pdf

Source Article

Been, S. K., Yildiz, E., Nieuwkerk, P. T., Pogány, K., Van De Vijver, D. A., & Verbon, A. (2017). Self-reported adherence and pharmacy refill adherence are both predictive for an undetectable viral load among HIV-infected migrants receiving cART. PloS one, 12(11), e0186912.

Response Options

  • First two items: 6-point Likert scale, ranging from 1='very poor' to 6='excellent'
  • Third item: 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1='not on day' to 5='all 7 days'
  • Fourth item: 6-point Likert scale, ranging from 1='within the past week' to 6='never missed'

Survey Items

  1. Thinking about the past four weeks, how would you rate your ability to take all your medications as your doctor prescribed them?
  2. Thinking about the past four weeks, how often did you take all your HIV antiretroviral medications as your doctor prescribed them?
  3. How many days in the past week did you take all anti-HIV medicines that were prescribed?
  4. When was the last time you missed any of your anti-HIV medications?

Internal Reliability

Reliability information was not available.

Validity

Criterion-related validity assessed via comparison with viral load.

Google Scholar

View article on Google Scholar

Terms Of Use

Individuals may use this information for research or educational purposes only and may not use this information for commercial purposes. When using this instrument, please cite:

Been, S. K., Yildiz, E., Nieuwkerk, P. T., Pogány, K., Van De Vijver, D. A., & Verbon, A. (2017). Self-reported adherence and pharmacy refill adherence are both predictive for an undetectable viral load among HIV-infected migrants receiving cART. PloS one, 12(11), e0186912.

When presenting results using any survey information you obtained from the SABI, please acknowledge the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Center for AIDS Research (CFAR), an NIH funded program P30 AI50410.