Adherence Flashcards
What is adherence?
- Compliance: “do as I say”
- Adherence: “do as we agreed”
- Therapeutic Alliance: “what can we both do to make this work”
Defining Adherence
- The extent to which a person takes medications as prescribed: correct dose, time and duration
- The extent to which a person’s behavior—taking medication, following a diet, and/or executing lifestyle changes—corresponds with agreed recommendations from a health care provider
No. of Pills Taken in TimeX / No. of Pills Prescribed for TimeX (*100) >= 80%
Assessing Adherence
• Patient Interview
o Be non-judgmental
o Be empathetic
o Give permission to be honest
o Ask about most immediate past
o Ask appropriate questions! (open-ended)
- What medications do you take?
- What is the dose and how often do you take it?
- How are your medications helping you?
- What side effects/concerns do you have about your meds?
- How many times have you missed a dose in the last week?
- What do you use to help you remember your meds?
- What causes you to miss doses?
- What regimen is easiest for you to adhere to?
Assessing Adherence Cont.
• Review medication usage patterns - Counts of unused “pills” - Timely pharmacy refill records - Diaries - Electronic monitoring devices • Assess patient - BP - HR - Weight - Self-reported symptoms • Biologic assays: labs, drug levels
Types of Adherence Barriers
- Patient: attitude or understanding (educational + psychosocial support)
- Medication regimen (clinical support)
- Provider or system issues (practical support)
Provider or System Barriers
• Time to counsel and develop interpersonal relationships
• Private space for counseling
• Patient access to care and medications
- Cost
- Insurance coverage
- Transportation
• Information sharing across providers
- Limited access to the patient’s health history
Patient Barriers: Health Literacy
Capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions.
- A person being able to understand and take the right action to make good health choices
Addressing Patient Barriers
• Counsel with a collaborative approach • Provide verbal and written education - Lay/plain language - Highlight the most important points first - Focus on actions - Review administration techniques - Provide adherence tools • Teachback • Provide resources for follow-up
Types of Treatment Barriers + Solution
- Number of medications (avoid unnecessary meds, pick the best strength)
- Dosing frequency (use long acting agents)
- Duration of therapy (evaluate need to continue)
- Side effects (educate/provide tools)
- Intrusion on lifestyle (link to daily activities, minimize med #/freq, provide dosing sched)
- Storage requirements
- Timing with meals
- Drug availability (sufficient quantity/refills, refill reminders)
- Cost (cost saving programs, changes in insurance)
If All Else Fails… Try, Try Again!
• Increase the intensity of clinical follow-up • Shorten the follow-up interval • Recruit additional healthcare-team members – Mental health – Chemical dependency counselor – Social worker or case manager • Involve family and friends • Consider DOT programs
Adherence Devices
- Medication Lists: MedActionPlan, Universal Med Form (ISMP)
- Pill boxes
- Alarms
- Free apps: MyMedSched, MediSafe, RoundHealth, Dosecast, iPharmacy, MyMeds, Pill Reminder, RxmindMe