| Literature DB >> 25152780 |
Marie P Schneider1, Isabelle Krummenacher2, Hugo Figueiredo2, Julien Marquis2, Oliver Bugnon3.
Abstract
Nonadherence to medication treatment regimens is a major preventable risk behavior in both acute and chronic diseases. Community pharmacists are facilitators in community care for promoting medication adherence and they should implement interdisciplinary medication adherence programs. To do so, pharmacists should be educated in medication adherence, and new pharmaceutical care policies should be implemented. The healthcare system should evolve to better meet the specific needs of patients. AIMS: this article describes what has been undertaken in the last decade in medication adherence in terms of education, research, practice and policy in Switzerland.Entities:
Keywords: Medication Adherence; Pharmacists; Switzerland
Year: 2009 PMID: 25152780 PMCID: PMC4139742 DOI: 10.4321/s1886-36552009000200001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Pract (Granada) ISSN: 1885-642X
Medication adherence courses in Swiss pharmacy schools.
| University | Degree (years) | Course | Content | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basel | Master (4) | 2-hour course on medication adherence | Theoretical basis, i.e. definition, measurement, intervention in the field of adherence in ambulatory care. | Oral exam |
| Master (5) | 4-hour workshop on medication adherence | Workshop on adherence with asthma treatment,patient education and monitoring. | Oral exam | |
| 4-hour workshop on life style adherence | Workshop on smoking cessation, stages of change, motivational interview. | |||
| Geneva | Master (5) | 4-hour course on medication adherence | Definition of medication adherence and persistence, prevalence, risks linked to nonadherence, psychological theoretical frameworks, methods for evaluating/measuring adherence, program and techniques for promoting and supporting adherence, case studies. | Oral exam |
| 1-hour on empathy | Definition and theory, translation into practice, case studies | Oral exam | ||
| 2-hour course on patient empowerment | Definition, associated concepts (coping, disease management), translation into practice, case studies. | |||
| 2-hour therapeutic education | Definition and theory, translation into practice, case studies | |||
| 2-hour motivational interviewing | Introduction to motivational interviewing, i.e. its specific concepts (resistance, self-efficacy, ambivalence) and clinical skills (empathy, reflective listening, summaries, etc.); case studies. | |||
| 2-hour workshop on interviewing techniques | Discussion of case studies, which students encountered during training; role-play. | |||
| Zurich | Master (5) | No specific course | Medication adherence is taught during other courses, especially courses devoted to chronic patient treatment, all year through. | - |
Swiss research studies evaluating adherence.
| Study characteristics | Measuring methods for adherence | Study outcomes | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schneider et al. | Medication adherence electronic monitor (MEMS™) connected to a personal modem (HomeLink™) installed on the subject's telephone line. | Taking adherence | On-line monitoring was well accepted by subjects. Adherence improved in 3 patients (from 76% to 90%, 69% to 87%, and 83% to 89%). |
| Fallab-Stubi et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), pill count, urine test for isoniazid. | Taking adherence | Mean adherence measured by electronic monitors was 91% (+/-18.6%). Pill count and urine test tended to overestimate adherence when compared to electronic data. Combined intervention of pharmacist and physician improved medication adherence significantly but transiently in all 4 non-adherent patients. |
| Schwed et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), pill count. | Taking adherence, dosing adherence | Total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol decreased significantly (18% and 25%, p<.001) during the study. Taking adherence was 89% +/- 13.5%, dosing adherence was 82% +/- 19.5% and timing adherence was 82% +/- 19.5%. Adherence by pill count was 93% +/- 9.5%. A significant correlation between adherence and decrease in LDL-cholesterol was observed when adherence was assessed electronically. |
| Arnet et al. | One structured interview per patient during hospitalization on an internal medicine ward. | Self-reported adherence, specific knowledge as for example name of medications, personal perception of prescribed medication. | 78% subjects reported good adherence, while 13% admitted nonadherence. Knowledge was significantly better in adherent patients (p=.048). Personal perception did not differ by adherers and nonadherers. Subjects used 3 main strategies to ensure adherence: visual aids (69%), coupling to a ritual (26%), supervision by a third person (6%). |
| Stubi et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), pill count, self-administered questionnaire. | Percentage of adherers: taking all 3 pills, on alternate days, at least one hour before a meal. | No difference in adherence was shown by group. All subjects took the 2 capsules but only 53% subjects adhere to all recommendations according to the electronic monitors and 68% to the questionnaire (p=.05). |
| Burnier et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (each single antihypertensive drug was delivered in a MEMS™ monitor). For the first 2 months, patient's usual treatment was provided in MEMS™ without any other intervention; for the next 2 months, treatment could be adapted if necessary. | Dosing adherence, blood pressure. | Monitoring of adherence alone was associated with an improvement in BP (p<.01). BP was normalized in one-third of patients. Patients with lowest adherence had higher diastolic BP (p=.04). |
| Bertholet et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (one MEMS™monitor per medication) | Taking adherence, blood pressure. | Significant decrease in BP (from 159/104 +/-23/12 mmHg to 143/92 +/-20/15, p<.001) after inclusion. BP was normalized in one third of patients. Mean adherence of patients with normalized BP was 90.7% (range, 64-100%), and was similar in the non-normalized patients. |
| Arnet et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), pill count, patient interviews. | Taking adherence | Taking adherence was 102%. Pill boxes were opened >once a day by 10 patients on a least one monitored day. In 7 patients, the number of openings exceeded the number of capsules provided but only 2 patients admitted overconsumption. |
| Wermeille et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™). | H. pylori eradication rate, percentage of subjects taking more than 85% of their doses. | H. pylori eradication rate was 65% (95% CI: 54.8-76.0%). 89% of subjects were adherers. On multivariate analysis, H. pylori eradication was inversely associated with poor adherence (p=.029). Poor adherence and bacterial resistance explained 40% of failures. |
| Schneider et al. | Nasal spray use was monitored by a microchip fixed on the spray unit (microswitch-actuated metered-dose inhaler chronolog, MDILog™). | Number of abstainers at 12 and 4 months; pattern of use of NNS. | Success rate was 17.4% at 12 and 9.8% at 24 months. Abstainers use NNS more than failures (12 vs. 6 puffs/day, p=.05), use it less in the morning compared with failures (26.6 vs. 32.8% of total median daily dose, p=.03) but used it more in the evening/night (35.3 vs. 26.7% of total median daily dose, p=.007). |
| Landry et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), self-administered questionnaire on drug intake | Taking of all the tablets at the right day. | Only 26 travelers (32%) took all the doses at the expected date. 19/81 (24%) took them with intervals of +/-1 day. |
| Santschi et al. | Intelligent Drug Administration System (IDAS II™ electronic monitor) vs. MEMS™ monitor as control. | Patients’ opinion on both devices, rates of adherence, blood pressure. | Patients found MEMS™ easier to use than IDAS™ (p<.001) but appreciated IDAS™ blister packs better than MEMS™ bulk packaging (p<.01). Median taking adherence was 99% and comparable with both devices. No difference in blood pressure between groups. |
| Figueiredo et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), combined to repeated interviews with subjects. Composite adherence score between electronic monitoring, pill count and validated pocket-doses. | Quality of execution | Quality of execution was high and stable over time. The average decrease in SBP from baseline was 15mmHg. SBP decreased as quality of execution increases with a maximum around 85% adherence. |
Taking adherence is the percentage of openings of the device divided by the number of prescribed doses. Dosing adherence is the percentage of days with correct dosing. Timing adherence is the percentage of openings of the device with a correct timing (+/-25% of prescribed interval). Quality of execution: data are summarized in a sequence of binary data, Zij, indicating whether yes (1) or no (0), at least one of the medicines was taken as prescribed on day j by patient i.
Swiss research studies evaluating medication adherence enhancing programs.
| Study characteristics | Intervention | Study outcomes | Study results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schneider et al. | Electronic monitors of medication adherence (MEMS™) connected to a personal modem (HomeLink™) installed on the subject's telephone line vs. electronic monitors only in controlled subjects. Pharmacist called patient at home in case of drug omission. | Taking, dosing and timing adherence, seizure frequency. | Dosing adherence was high and similar in both groups. There was a trend towards less epileptic events in the intervention vs. the control group (p=.07). |
| Santschi et al. | Electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), plus non-structured repeated interviews at the pharmacy in the intervention group vs. electronic monitors only in control group. | Normalized BP (<140/90 mmHg) | Likelihood of reaching target BP was higher in intervention group compared to control group (p<.05). At 4 months, 38% patients in intervention group reached target BP vs. 12% patients in control. (p<.05), and 21% vs. 9% at 12 months (p=ns). Multivariate analysis showed that being allocated to intervention group was associated with a greater odds of reaching target BP at 4 (p<.01) and 12 months (p=.051). |
| Krummenacher et al. | Continuous electronic monitoring of medication adherence (MEMS™), combined to repeated motivational interviewing in intervention vs. blinded medication adherence electronic monitoring in control group. Composite adherence score between electronic monitoring, pill count and validated pocket-doses. | Quality of execution and persistence. | The study was feasible in one site but not in the other one. Quality of execution was high in both groups (97% vs. 95%) but decreased statistically more over time in the control versus the intervention group (p<.0001). |
Example of a patient’s medication history showing the timing of dispensation and the number of tablets dispensed per month.
| Mr O.V. 81 years old | 2008 | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dosage | Regimen | JAN | FEB | MAR | APR | MAY | JUN | JUL | AUG | SEP | OCT | NOV | DEC | |||
| 300mg | 1-0-0-0 | 90 | 90 | 90 | 90 | |||||||||||
| 20mg | 1-0-0-0 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | |||||||||||
| 1.5mg | 1-0-0-0 | 90 | 90 | 90 | 90 | |||||||||||
| 5mg | 1-0-0 | 30 | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | ||||||||||
| 60mg | 1-1-1 | 168 | 84 | 84 | 168 | 84 | 168 | 84 | ||||||||
| 10mg | 1-0-0 | 30 | 30 | 100 | 100 | |||||||||||
| 500mg/400UI | 2-0-0 | 120 | 120 | 120 | 120 | 120 | 120 | |||||||||
| 1000mg | 1 to 2 tab/24h | 80 | 20 | 40 | 60 | 80 | 20 | 40 | ||||||||
| 500mg | 32 | |||||||||||||||