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Definitions, variants, and causes of nonadherence with medication: a challenge for tailored interventions

TLDR
There is not just one solution for the nonadherence problem that fits all patients, and to improve adherence effectively, there is a need for a tailored approach based on the type and cause ofNonadherence and the specific needs of the patient.
Abstract
Background: Nonadherence with medication is a complex and multidimensional health care problem. The causes may be related to the patient, treatment, and/or health care provider. As a consequence, substantial numbers of patients do not benefit optimally from pharmacotherapy, resulting in increased morbidity and mortality as well as increased societal costs. Several interventions may contribute to improved adherence. However, most interventions have only a modest effect. Thus, despite the many efforts made, there has been little progress made as yet in tackling the problem of nonadherence. Methods: This paper summarizes the definitions and taxonomy of adherence with medication, as well as types and causes of nonadherence. In addition, interventions aimed at improvement of adherence are discussed. Conclusion: There is not just one solution for the nonadherence problem that fits all patients. Most interventions to improve adherence are aimed at all patients regardless of whether they are adherent or not. Recently, a number of tailored interventions have been described in the literature. Modern techniques are useful. Electronic pill boxes combined with Short Message Service reminders are specifically designed to improve unintentional adherence and have resulted in an increase in refill adherence in diabetic patients with suboptimal adherence. Tailored Internet interventions are a possibility for influencing patient drug-taking behavior and show promising results. Tailored counseling interventions targeted at the underlying causes of nonadherence seem an attractive method for supporting patients with their use of drugs. However, despite the plausible theoretical framework, data on long-term health effects of the various interventions are not available. To improve adherence effectively, there is a need for a tailored approach based on the type and cause of nonadherence and the specific needs of the patient. © 2013 Hugtenburg et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Supporting Adherence to Medicines for Long-Term Conditions

TL;DR: The Perceptions and Practicalities Approach (PAPA), a pragmatic framework positing that adherence/nonadherence is essentially a produce of individual motivation and ability, is described and how PAPA can be operationalized is discussed, including the application of theoretical models of illness and treatment representation to address salient adherence-related perceptions.
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A Review of Medication Adherence Monitoring Technologies

TL;DR: This review focuses on recent advances in the field of technology-based medication adherence approaches and pays particular attention to their technical monitoring aspects, including sensor systems, proximity sensing, vision systems, and combinations of these.
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Adherence to Antihypertensive Therapy

TL;DR: Research to understand the effects of technology-mediated interventions, mechanisms underlying adherence behavior, and sex-race differences in determinants of low adherence and intervention effectiveness may enhance patient-specific approaches to improve adherence and disease control.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adherence to long-term therapies: evidence for action.

TL;DR: This report highlights the need for a multi-disciplinary approach to adherence, emphasizes system factors that need to be addressed in successfully implementing adherence-enhancing strategies, and provides illustrative examples of the ways in which professionals have contributed in their own fields of expertise including cardiovascular care among other fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adherence to Long-Term Therapies: Evidence for Action:

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive report entitled Adherence to Long-Term Therapies: Evidence for Action w1x was published, focusing on nine chronic conditions and their risk factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interventions for enhancing medication adherence.

TL;DR: The research in this field needs advances, including improved design of feasible long-term interventions, objective adherence measures, and sufficient study power to detect improvements in patient-important clinical outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review of the associations between dose regimens and medication compliance

TL;DR: A review of studies that measured compliance using EM confirmed that the prescribed number of doses per day is inversely related to compliance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medication Compliance and Persistence: Terminology and Definitions

TL;DR: Providing specific definitions for compliance and persistence is important for sound quantitative expressions of patients' drug dosing histories and their explanatory power for clinical and economic events and adoption by health outcomes researchers will provide a consistent framework and lexicon for research.
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