| Literature DB >> 25931823 |
Peggy El-Mallakh1, Jan Findlay1.
Abstract
The purpose of this review is to describe research over the past 10 years on the role of support services in promoting medication adherence in mental health consumers diagnosed with schizophrenia. A literature search was conducted using the terms "medication adherence," "schizophrenia," and "support services," using Medline, PubMed, and CINAHL. Reference lists from published studies were also reviewed to identify additional research studies. Twenty-two articles focused on support-service intervention studies, and these were selected for review. Available support-service interventions include adherence therapy, electronic reminders via text messages and telephones, cognitive-behavioral and motivational strategies, and financial incentives. Support-service intervention strategies need to be tailored to the specific needs of mental health consumers with schizophrenia. More research is needed to investigate effective support services to enhance long-term adherence and adherence to medications for medical illnesses in this population.Entities:
Keywords: interventions; medication adherence; schizophrenia; support services; therapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25931823 PMCID: PMC4404876 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S56107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Family and/or clinician educational support
| Citation | Anderson et al | Byerly et al | Farooq et al | Gray et al | Kopelowicz et al | Mittal et al | Sajatovic et al |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design type | RCT | Quasi-experimental | RCT | RCT | 3-armed RCT | RCT | Prospective, noncontrolled trial |
| Intervention description | AT – weekly sessions for 8 weeks, 20–60 minutes | Compliance therapy 4–6 sessions, 30–60 minutes each | STOPS – family member as key care supervisor One session to train key care supervisor | AT – weekly sessions for 8 weeks | Culturally adapted multifamily group | AAI – 9 sessions: | CAE, a psychosocial/psychoeducational program about medication use plus haloperidol decanoate-LAI = CAE-L administered over 6 months |
| Data collection time points | Baseline Postintervention | Monthly – 3 months preintervention to 6 months postintervention | Baseline, 3 months, 6 months, 12 months | Baseline and 52 weeks | Baseline, 4 months, 8 months, 12 months, 18 months, 24 months | Baseline, 4 weeks, and 4 months | Treatment = baseline, 13, and 25 weeks follow-up; Posttreatment follow-up =9 and 12 months |
| Sample | AT =12 | n=30 | STOPS =55 | AT =204 | MFG-Ad =64 | AAI =22 | n=30 |
| Measures | ATSAT | MEMS | PANSS | MOS SF-36 | Treatment Compliance Interview | Self/caregiver adherence report Pharmacy refill records | Primary = medication adherence and housing status via self-reports: TRQ |
| Findings | No significant improvements in medication adherence or psychiatric symptoms | Adherence significantly increased 1 month after intervention, declined by 1.4% per month for remaining months | STOPS: significant reduction in PANSS scores, positive/general symptoms, significant improvement in GAF | No significant difference in medication adherence and quality of life between AT and HE groups | MFG-Ad had increased adherence compared to MFG-S and TAU | 65% of AAI group adherent after 4 months 55.6% TAU group adherent | CAE-L associated with good adherence to LAI at 6 months =76%, Overall oral medication adherence: 46% missed prior to study versus 10% at 6 months ( |
Abbreviations: 14-Q, 14-Point Questionnaire; AAI, antipsychotic adherence intervention; AIMS, Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale; AT, adherence therapy; ATMSQ, Attitude Towards Mood Stabilizer Questionnaire; ATSAT, Adherence Therapy Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire; BAS, Barnes Akathisia Scale; BPRS-E, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale-Expanded; CAE, customized adherence enhancement program; CAE-L, customized adherence enhancement plus long-acting injectable antipsychotic; CDS, Calgary Depression Scale; CGI, Clinical Global Impressions Scale; DAI, Drug Attitude Inventory; GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; HE, health education; ITAS, Insight and Treatment Attitude Scale; L or LAI, long-acting injection; LUNSERS, Liverpool University Neuroleptic Side Effect Rating Scale; MAQ, Medication Adherence Questionnaire; MEMS, Medication Event Monitoring Scale; MFG, multifamily group; MFG-Ad, Multifamily Group-Adherence; MFG-S, Multifamily Group – Standard; MOS SF-36, Medical Outcomes Survey 36-item short form questionnaire; MRS, Morisky Rating Scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PETiT, Personal Evaluation of Transitions in Treatment; QWBS, Quality of Well-Being Scale; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SAI-E, Schedule for the Assessment of Insight – Expanded Version; SOFAS, Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale; STOPS, supervised treatment in outpatients for schizophrenia; TAU, treatment as usual; TRQ, Tablet Routine Questionnaire.
Miscellaneous support services
| Citation | Morken et al | Priebe et al | Valenstein et al | Velligan et al | Velligan et al |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design type | RCT | RCT with cluster randomization controlled trial of treatment teams | RCT with block-randomization of patients (experimental without double-blind) | 3-armed RCT | 3-armed RCT |
| Intervention description | IT =2 years of assertive outreach community treatment, family psychoeducation, social skills training/CBT | Patients on intervention teams who adhered ≤75% of the time | Intervention: Meds-Help = unit-dose medication packaging medication education | Pharm-CAT – tailored environmental supports and weekly home visits | Full-CAT – tailored environmental supports for independent living skills, social/role performance, medication adherence |
| Data collection time points | Baseline, 12 months, 24 months | Baseline to 12-month endpoint | 12 months prior to enrollment (baseline), 0–6 months, and 6–12 months after enrollment | Baseline, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months | Baseline, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months, 12 months, 15 months |
| Sample | IT =30 | Intervention =78, control =63 | Meds-Help =58 | Pharm-CAT =46 | Full-CAT =34 |
| Measures | Medication Adherence (self, family and clinician reports) | Medication adherence | Primary: MPR | Medication adherence | SCID |
| Findings | No significant differences in medication adherence between IT and ST | Modest financial incentives improve adherence to LAI 12-month trial adherence: intervention group =85%, controls =71% | MPRs = Meds-Help group had significantly > MPRs at 6 months (Meds-Help MPR 0.91, UC MPR 0.64) and 12 months | Medication adherence – Pharm-CAT =90% | Medication adherence significantly higher in Full-CAT and Pharm-CAT groups compared to TAU; remained significantly higher after home visits stopped |
Abbreviations: BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; CGI, Clinical Global Impressions Scale; CBT, cognitive–behavioral therapy; CSQ, Client Satisfaction Questionnaire; Full-CAT, full cognitive adaptation training; IT, integrated treatment; LAI, long-acting injectable; MPR, medication possession ratio; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; Pharm-CAT, cognitive adaptation training with medication education; QWBS, Quality of Well-Being Scale; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnosis; SOFAS, Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale; ST, standard treatment; TAU, treatment as usual; UC, usual care.
Electronic devices
| Citation | Beebe et al | Granholm et al | Montes et al | Pijnenborg et al | Španiel et al | Stip et al |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design type | RCT | Quasi-experimental; pilot study | RCT open-label, multicenter trial | Quasi-experimental waiting list controlled trial; random assignment | RCT 1-year prospective, parallel-group, double-blind study | RCT |
| Intervention description | TIPS | 3 sets of 4 text messages sent via mobile phone, 6 days per week for 12 weeks – CBT format | Intervention group = daily reminders for 3 months via text message (SMS) to take their medication | 6 weekly psychoeducation group sessions with 5–7 patients | Text message sent via computer program: ITAREPS 1 time/week | 3 visits: baseline, 6 weeks, and 8 weeks to measure impact of DoPill’s® (electronic pill dispenser) impact on medication adherence and psychiatric symptoms |
| Data collection time points | Baseline and monthly for 3 months | Baseline and 12 weeks | Baseline, 3 months, and 6-months | Intervention group: A1 + B + A2: A1 = baseline phase, B = intervention phase, A2 = follow-up phase | Baseline, 6 months, and 12 months (end of study) | Baseline, 6 weeks, and 8 weeks |
| Sample | TIPS =15 | n=55 | SMS =100 patients | n=62 | Intervention =75 | Experimental group =26 |
| Measures | Pill counts | PANSS | MAQ | PANSS | CGI-S and CGI-I | BARS |
| Findings | TIPS: 80% adherence to psychiatric medications; 33% adherence to nonpsychiatric medications | Significant improvement in medication adherence for those living independently; improved social functioning; reduced severity of AH | Significantly reduced MAQ score with SMS reminders vs controls at 3 months (25% versus 17.5%) at 6 months, maintained | Overall % of goal-achievement =47% across patients, (SD =27.9%) and increased with text prompting =62% (SD =20.1%, returned to baseline levels without prompts =40% (SD =31.7%); Medication adherence = 57% at baseline (A1), 65% at intervention phase (B), and 48% at follow-up (A2) | No significant difference in medication adherence between groups | 46% non-adherent; Baseline adherent patientshad significantly > adherence vs non-adherent patients over 6-weeks via BARS measures; ie, Mean AAR 67% after 6-weeks; Proportion of patients with <70% and <90% AAR =46% and 54% |
Abbreviations: AAR, antipsychotic adherence ratio; AH, auditory hallucinations; BARS, Brief Adherence Rating Scale; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory-Second Edition; CBT, cognitive–behavioral therapy; CGI-I, Clinical Global Impression Scale-Improvement; CGI-S, Clinical Global Impression Scale-Severity; CGI-SCH, Clinical Global Impression Scale-Schizophrenia; CGI-SI-DC, Clinical Global Impression-Severity of Illness and Degree of Change; CL, confidence limit; DAI, Drug Attitude Inventory; EQ-5D, EuroQol; EWSQ-10FM, 10-item Early Warning Signs Questionnaire (Family Member); EWSQ-10P, 10-item Early Warning Signs Questionnaire (Patient); GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; ILSS, Independent Living Skills Survey; ITAREPS, Information Technology-Aided Program of Relapse Prevention in Schizophrenia; MAQ, Medication Adherence Questionnaire; MCRS, Medication Compliance Rating Scale; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; PIRE, pharmacological intervention requiring event; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCMTS, Short Client Motivation for Therapy Scale; SD, standard deviation; SFS, Social Functioning Scale; SMS, short message service; SUMD, Scale to Assess Unawareness of Mental Disorder; TAU, treatment as usual; TIPS, telephone intervention problem-solving.
Motivational interviewing
| Citation | Barkhof et al | Hudson et al | Maneesakorn et al | Staring et al |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design type Intervention description | Motivational interviewing versus health education 5–8 sessions over 26 weeks | Veterans Affairs practice guideline implementation RN counseling/problem solving Clinical interview – baseline and every visit | RCT | RCT |
| Data collection time points Sample | Baseline, 26 weeks, 6 months | Baseline and 6 months | Baseline and 9 weeks | Baseline and 6 months |
| Measures | PANSS | PANSS | PANSS | SES |
| Findings | No significant differences in medication adherence between MI and HE; reduced hospitalizations for female patients in the MI group | Veterans with enhanced guideline/RN counseling significantly more likely to be adherent at 6-month follow-up | AT group: significant improvement in PANSS scores, positive symptoms, attitudes toward medications, satisfaction with medications compared to TAU | TAT = significantly improved service engagement and medication adherence compared to TAU |
Abbreviations: AT, adherence therapy; BARS, Brief Adherence Rating Scale; CRS, Compliance Rating Scale; DAI, Drug Attitude Inventory; DAI-30, Hogan Drug Attitude Inventory; EQ-5D, EuroQol; GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; HE, health education; LCS, Life Chart Schedule; LUNSERS, Liverpool University Neuroleptic Side Effect Rating Scale; MAQ, Medication Adherence Questionnaire; MI, motivational interviewing; PANSS, Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; RCT, randomized controlled trial; RN, registered nurse; SES, Service Engagement Scale; SWAM, Satisfaction with Antipsychotic Medication Scale; TAT, treatment adherence therapy; TAU, treatment as usual.