| Literature DB >> 26839879 |
Mélanie Lelubre1, Susan Kamal1, Noëllie Genre2, Jennifer Celio1, Séverine Gorgerat2, Denise Hugentobler Hampai2, Aline Bourdin1, Jerôme Berger1, Olivier Bugnon1, Marie Schneider1.
Abstract
The Community Pharmacy of the Department of Ambulatory Care and Community Medicine (Policlinique Médicale Universitaire, PMU), University of Lausanne, developed and implemented an interdisciplinary medication adherence program. The program aims to support and reinforce medication adherence through a multifactorial and interdisciplinary intervention. Motivational interviewing is combined with medication adherence electronic monitors (MEMS, Aardex MWV) and a report to patient, physician, nurse, and other pharmacists. This program has become a routine activity and was extended for use with all chronic diseases. From 2004 to 2014, there were 819 patient inclusions, and 268 patients were in follow-up in 2014. This paper aims to present the organization and program's context, statistical data, published research, and future perspectives.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26839879 PMCID: PMC4709610 DOI: 10.1155/2015/103546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Medication adherence program—organizational process. Note. EMs = electronic monitors of medication adherence.
Figure 2Example: results of an electronic monitor—calendar and graph (from medAmigo [14]).
Figure 3Fisher's model—Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills model of adherence to antiretroviral treatment (adapted from Fisher et al. [16]). Note. HAART = highly active antiretroviral therapy.
Patient-level intervention according to Michie's et al. taxonomy [26].
| Michie's et al. taxonomy | Intervention |
|---|---|
| Goals and planning | Set realistic goals and adjust them to build up skills, use the problem solving technique, and raise awareness on discrepancy between current behavior and goals as a motor of change |
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| Feedback and monitoring | Electronic monitoring, empathic reinforcement, alliance through LCD display of electronic pill monitor, and ensuring continuity of care through medication adherence report |
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| Social support | Reinforce positive practical and/or emotional support, invite significant others to attend interview, and offer the possibility to bring adherence report back home to discuss it with significant others |
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| Shaping knowledge | Assess patient's cognitive and behavioral knowledge and needs in regard to long-term adherence, short-term and long-term side effects, fill in gaps with adequate vocabulary, and reevaluate needs over time |
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| Natural consequences | Evaluate consequences, which are relevant to the patient (e.g., health, quality of life, and social, emotional, affective, financial, and professional consequences) and use hypotheses as a motor of potential changes (e.g., what would happen if you would take your medication on a regular basis?) |
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| Comparison of behavior | Ask the permission for telling what other patients did in a similar situation |
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| Associations | Associate drug intake with relevant individual daily actions, behaviors, cues, and reminders |
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| Repetition and substitution | Plan short but repeated interviews over time, adjusted to patients' needs |
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| Comparison of outcomes | Compare change in clinical outcomes and in adherence and set future goals |
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| Reward and threat | Congratulate patient on achievements as small as they are; if necessary, evoke risks cautiously with patient agreement |
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| Regulation | Detangle possible triangulation between patient and healthcare providers, listen to and regulate emotions, and, if possible, wait and see if patient is not ready to change behavior (preparation phase) |
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| Antecedents | Evaluate adherence with past treatments as indicator |
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| Identity | Reinforce patient positive behaviour, respect patient's rhythm and possibilities, and keep contact with patient (e.g., schedule a new interview in case of a missed appointment) |
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| Scheduled consequences | Identify changes in clinical outcomes |
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| Self-belief | Explore patient's past success, empower patient, and support patient in building self-confidence, self-efficacy, and motivation with treatment |
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| Covert learning | — |
Figure 4Inclusion in the medication adherence program and stop from 2004 to 2014. Note. Patients who reentered the program after a gap of more than 1 year were considered to be new inclusions.
Figure 5Number of medication adherence interviews delivered by pharmacists.
Time intervals in-between interviews and time per patient visit to the medication adherence program (visits n = 7171).
| Median | IQR | |
|---|---|---|
| Time intervals in-between interviews [days] | ||
| HIV | 34 | [15–78] |
| Multiple sclerosis (MP) | 28 | [20–42] |
| Oncology | 49 | [30–95] |
| Other chronic conditions | 35 | [19–64.5] |
| Total |
| [ |
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| Time needed for inclusion interviews [minutes] | ||
| Interview | 10 | [5–15] |
| Report | 25 | [17–36.5] |
| EMs handling | 20 | [15–25] |
| Total |
| [ |
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| Time needed for follow-up interviews [minutes] | ||
| Interview | 10 | [5–15] |
| Report | 12 | [7–20] |
| EMs handling | 13 | [9–20] |
| Total |
| [ |
Note. IQR = interquartile range.