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Fighting America’s Other Drug Problem
University of Missouri researchers find key
to combating medication non-adherence
November 17, 2010 – Medications do not have
a chance to fight health problems if they
are taken improperly or not taken at all. Non-adherence
to medications costs
thousands of lives and billions of dollars
each year in the United States alone,
according to the New England Healthcare
Institute.
Now, researchers at the University of
Missouri have developed an intervention
strategy that is three times more effective
than previously studied techniques at
improving adherence in patients.
Cynthia Russell, associate
professor in the MU
Sinclair School of Nursing, found
that patients who used a Continuous
Self-Improvement strategy drastically
improved their medication adherence.
The strategy focuses on counseling patients
to understand how taking medications can fit
into their daily routines. Nurses meet with
patients and discuss their daily schedules
to identify optimal times to take
medications and safe places to store their
medications.
“Continuous Self-Improvement is a
personalized strategy, and the scheduling is
different for every patient,” Russell said.
“Finding the right place and time for
patients to take medications can be as
simple as storing the pill bottles in their
cars so their medication will be available
for them to take during the morning commute
to work.”
In the study, kidney
transplant patients were
given pill bottles with caps that
automatically recorded the date and time
whenever they were opened. Each month, a
nurse reviewed the results in illustrated
reports with the patients and discussed how
they could improve their adherence.
The researchers found significant
improvements among patients’ adherence
rates. The results indicate the technique is
three times more effective than previously
studied techniques.
Russell recommends that patients meet with
nurses to implement the strategy a few
months after medical procedures, when they
have returned to their normal routines.
During follow-up appointments, patients can
discuss potential problems and strategies
for taking their medications.
“Ideally, all patients should use electronic
monitoring pill bottles because it enables
them to see computerized graphs of their
previous month’s medication schedules and
medication taking,” Russell said. “We found
that patients enjoyed seeing their results
at each meeting and were interested in
receiving the feedback.”
An estimated 35 percent of kidney transplant
patients do not take their medications daily
and 75 percent do not take their medications
at the correct times.
It is important for transplant patients to
take medications correctly because incorrect
dosages could result in side-effects,
rejection of the organs or death.
Russell presented her research at the
Council on the Advancement of Nursing
Science conference in Washington, D.C.
earlier this year.
Her latest study on medical adherence will
be published in the journal,Clinical
Transplantation.
Russell’s research was funded by grants from
the American Nephrology Nurses Association,
National Kidney Foundation, the MU
Interdisciplinary Center on Aging, MU
Research Council and the Iowa Gerontological
Nursing Intervention Research Center.