| Literature DB >> 31317511 |
Marcel Bilger1,2, Tina T Wong3, Jia Yi Lee3, Kaye L Howard4, Filipinas G Bundoc4, Ecosse L Lamoureux4,3, Eric A Finkelstein4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Poor adherence to medications is a global public health concern with substantial health and cost implications, especially for chronic conditions. In the USA, poor adherence is estimated to cause 125,000 deaths and cost $US100 billion annually. The most successful adherence-promoting strategies that have been identified so far have moderate effect, are relatively costly, and raise availability, feasibility, and/or scalability issues.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31317511 PMCID: PMC6885505 DOI: 10.1007/s40258-019-00497-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Health Econ Health Policy ISSN: 1175-5652 Impact factor: 2.561
Fig. 1Patient timeline. IOP intraocular pressure, RO research optometrist
Fig. 2Samples of SMS reminders, phone call prompts, and adherence reports sent to the participants
Fig. 3Study CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) flow diagram (source: author calculations using the program management documentation. MMAS Morisky Medication Adherence Scale™
Fig. 4Missing data patterns for the primary outcome. Note: by the end of Month 6, 538 (89.7%) monthly observations of the primary outcome were collected. Among the participants, 8% had missing observations due to withdrawal and discontinuation from the study and 9% due to a faulty or lost eCAP™ (source: author calculations using the data collected from the study)
Baseline sample characteristics, overall and by study group
| Characteristic | Overall | Study group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Adherence-contingent rebates | ||
| Primary outcome | |||
| Adherent days (%) | 76.1 | 76.5 | 75.8 |
| Secondary outcomes | |||
| Proportion of patients with adherence ≥ 75% (%) | 69.2 | 69.6 | 68.9 |
| Proportion of patients with adherence ≥ 90% (%) | 38.5 | 39.1 | 37.8 |
| Intraocular pressure [mean (SD)] | 18.4 (5.03) | 18.3 (5.34) | 18.5 (4.75) |
| GQL score [mean (SD)] | 19.3 (6.56) | 18.5 (4.31) | 20.0 (8.20) |
| EQ-5D-5L score [mean (SD)] | 0.879 (0.159) | 0.880 (0.151) | 0.878 (0.169) |
| Explanatory outcomes | |||
| Days all doses were taken at any time (%) | 83.6 | 83.4 | 83.9 |
| Doses taken on time (%) | 85.3 | 84.5 | 86.1 |
| Doses taken at any time (%) | 90.3 | 89.5 | 91.1 |
| Sociodemographic characteristics | |||
| Age [mean (SD)] | 64.7 (10.6) | 64.4 (1.79) | 64.9 (1.16) |
| Female (%) | 39.0 | 32.0 | 46.0 |
| Mandarin-speaking (%) | 48.0 | 54.0 | 42.0 |
| Highest level of education (%) | |||
| Primary and lower | 41.4 | 38.0 | 44.9 |
| Secondary | 36.4 | 40.0 | 32.7 |
| Tertiary | 22.2 | 22.0 | 22.5 |
| Married (%) | 67.7 | 72.0 | 63.3 |
| Employed (%) | 45.5 | 48.0 | 42.9 |
| Household monthly income (%) | |||
| < $S2000 | 43.1 | 52.2 | 35.7 |
| $S2000–3999 | 17.7 | 13.0 | 21.4 |
| $S4000–5999 | 19.6 | 17.4 | 21.4 |
| ≥ $S6000 | 19.6 | 17.4 | 21.4 |
| Type of housing (%) | |||
| 1- to 3-room flat | 27.3 | 28.0 | 26.5 |
| 4-room flat | 39.4 | 42.0 | 36.7 |
| ≥ 5-room flat | 19.2 | 16.0 | 22.5 |
| Condo/bungalow | 14.1 | 14.0 | 14.3 |
| No. of household residents [mean (SD)] | 3.71 (1.98) | 3.74 (2.07) | 3.67 (1.91) |
| Other patient characteristics | |||
| No. of daily doses [mean (SD)] | 2.31 (1.54) | 2.18 (1.51) | 2.45 (1.58) |
| MMAS-8a score [mean (SD)] | 3.81 (1.48) | 3.90 (1.23) | 3.72 (1.70) |
| BIPQ score [mean (SD)] | 35.5 (10.7) | 34.5 (10.7) | 36.5 (10.6) |
| BMQ score [mean (SD)] | 30.0 (6.14) | 30.4 (6.72) | 29.6 (5.51) |
Source: authors’ estimates using the data collected from the study
BIPQ Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire, BMQ Beliefs about Medication Questionnaire, GQL Glaucoma Quality of Life, MMAS-8 8-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale™, SD standard deviation, $S Singapore dollars
a The authors have obtained written permission from copyright owners for any excerpts from copyrighted works that are included and have credited the sources in the Article or the Supplemental Materials. The credit footnote is located in the copyright agreement
Pre- and post-intervention outcomes per study group and incremental effect of adherence-contingent rebates at Month 6
| Outcomes | Average change from baseline at Month 6 | Incremental effect of adherence-contingent rebatesa | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control (%) | Adherence-contingent rebates (%) | Estimate (%) | 95% CI | |
| Primary outcome | ||||
| Adherent days | – 14.9** | – 2.73 | 12.2** | 1.43 to 22.9 |
| Secondary outcomes | ||||
| Proportion of patients with adherence ≥ 75% | – 21.4** | – 13.2* | 8.2 | – 9.8 to 26.2 |
| Proportion of patients with adherence ≥ 90% | – 19.6** | – 7.1 | 12.5 | – 5.3 to 30.2 |
| Intraocular pressure | – 2.88** | – 2.20** | 0.687 | – 0.786 to 2.16 |
| GQL | – 1.40* | – 0.951 | 0.452 | – 1.64 to 2.54 |
| EQ-5D-5L | 0.016 | 0.017 | 0.001 | – 0.075 to 0.077 |
| Mean cost of financial incentives | 8.07 | 5.06 to 11.1 | ||
| Explanatory outcomes | ||||
| Days where all doses were taken irrespective of time | – 13.9** | – 8.19** | 5.67 | – 4.38 to 15.7 |
| Doses taken on time | – 13.0** | – 4.88** | 8.16* | – 1.35 to 17.7 |
| Doses taken irrespective of time | – 11.3** | – 7.50** | 3.80 | – 4.15 to 11.8 |
Source: author calculations using the data collected from the study
CI confidence interval, GQL Glaucoma Quality of Life
*Statistically significant at the 10% level; **statistically significant at the 5% level
aCalculated as the difference in change from baseline at Month 6 between that adherence-contingent rebates and control groups
Fig. 5Unadjusted monthly adherence (a) and monthly incremental effect of adherence-contingent rebates (b), Months 1–6 (source: author calculation using the data collected from the study). Statistically significant at the 10% level; **statistically significant at the 5% level
Estimation of the moderating effect of select baseline characteristics on the effect of adherence-contingent rebates on medication adherence
| Baseline characteristic | Interaction between baseline characteristic and intervention indicator | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | 95% CI | ||
| Percentage of adherent days | – 2.79 | – 44.7 to 39.1 | |
| Average number of daily doses | 3.81 | – 2.90 to 10.5 | |
| Age | – 0.218 | – 1.29 to 0.852 | |
| Mandarin-speaking | – 0.553 | – 21.3 to 20.1 | |
| Household monthly income | |||
| < $US2000 | (reference) | (reference) | |
| $US2000–3999 | – 3.65 | – 41.3 to 34.0 | |
| $US4000–5999 | – 14.2 | – 47.3 to 19.0 | |
| ≥ $US6000 | – 1.12 | – 34.1 to 31.9 | |
| Intraocular pressure | 0.334 | – 1.64 to 2.31 | |
| BMQ score | – 0.419 | – 2.17 to 1.33 | |
| BIPQ score | – 0.054 | – 1.04 to 0.932 | |
| Treatment cost | 0.092 | – 0.080 to 0.263 | |
| Female | – 2.15 | – 25.2 to 20.9 | |
| Highest level of education | |||
| Primary and lower | (reference) | (reference) | |
| Secondary | 8.06 | – 16.3 to 32.4 | |
| Tertiary | 9.07 | – 22.9 to 41.1 | |
| Type of housing | |||
| 1- to 3-room flat | (reference) | (reference) | |
| 4-room flat | 10.5 | – 16.5 to 37.5 | |
| ≥ 5-room flat | – 8.67 | – 39.6 to 22.2 | |
| Condo/bungalow | 2.76 | – 32.6 to 38.1 | |
| Married | – 6.85 | – 29.8 to 16.0 | |
| Employed | – 2.65 | – 23.7 to 18.4 | |
| Taking other medications | – 7.46 | – 31.2 to 16.3 | |
Source: author calculations using the data collected from the study
BIPQ Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire, BMQ Beliefs about Medication Questionnaire, CI confidence interval
*Statistically significant at the 10% level; **statistically significant at the 5% level
Determinants of medication adherence at baseline in percentage points of adherent days
| Baseline characteristic | Estimate | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Average no. of daily doses | – 4.83** | – 8.58 to – 1.07 |
| Female | 3.71 | – 8.95 to 16.4 |
| Age | 0.018 | – 0.698 to 0.734 |
| Mandarin-speaking | 5.65 | – 8.85 to 20.1 |
| Married | – 3.30 | – 17.0 to 10.4 |
| Highest level of education | ||
| Primary and lower | (reference) | (reference) |
| Secondary | 10.3 | – 7.19 to 27.9 |
| Tertiary | – 3.80 | – 22.5 to 14.9 |
| Employed | – 2.49 | – 16.8 to 11.8 |
| Household monthly income | ||
| < $US2000 | (reference) | (reference) |
| $US2000–3999 | – 1.72 | – 22.1 to 18.7 |
| $US4000–5999 | 6.54 | – 15.4 to 28.5 |
| ≥ $US6000 | 10.1 | – 16.0 to 36.1 |
| Intraocular pressure | 0.075 | – 1.28 to 1.43 |
| Taking other medication | – 10.8 | – 25.9 to 4.25 |
| BMQ score | 0.167 | – 0.784 to 1.12 |
| BIPQ score | – 0.053 | – 0.689 to 0.582 |
| Constant | 83.5** | 13.1 to 154 |
Source: author calculations using the data collected from the study
BIPQ Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire, BMQ Beliefs about Medication Questionnaire, CI confidence interval
*Statistically significant at the 10% level; **statistically significant at the 5% level
| Even when treatment costs are reduced by generous public subsidies and/or insurance coverage, many patients are not adherent to their medication regimens and therefore do not receive the full benefits of treatment. |
| This study shows that offering rebates on treatment costs to reward patients who are adherent to their medications can significantly increase adherence rates. |
| The novel incentive strategy can be deployed in a wide range of clinical settings and has a strong potential to be cost effective as it directs subsidies/reimbursements at those more likely to benefit from their treatment. |