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RCSI Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Coláiste Ríoga na Máinleá in Éirinn Better Patient Adherence: Why patients don’t adhere and what we can do about it (maybe) Frank Doyle, PhD Adherence • Adherence: “...the extent to which a person’s behaviour – taking medication, following a diet and/or executing lifestyle changes – corresponds with agreed recommendations from a healthcare provider.” (WHO, 2003) • Adherence to chronic therapies estimated at only 50% • Even lower for non-medication therapies… Adherence and outcomes • Treatment failure or reduced efficacy • Poor outcomes, including long-term complications • Increased healthcare costs • But how much? Example: Cardiovascular disease • Chowdury et al - Meta-analysis of cardiovascular medication and morbidity/mortality • 44 studies (almost 2 million patients) • 60% had good adherence (>80%) • Comparing ‘good’ v ‘poor’ on preventive meds – Development of CVD: RR 0.85-0.81 – All-cause mortality: RR 0.55-0.71 European Heart Journal (2013) 34, 2940–2948 Two main points about adherence 1. Adherence is multidimensional, and is therefore a complex behaviour – In terms of both the things patients have to do, but also in terms of what influences their behaviour – Influenced by environmental, social aspects, cognitive and emotional aspects 2. There are actually two main types of non-adherence: – Unintentional non-adherence, such as forgetting – Intentional non-adherence, such as not wanting to get addicted to your medication • The intervention needs of each of these types is starkly different Adherence is a complex behaviour • Adherence is a complex behaviour • Our behaviour is determined by a complex interplay of: – – – – Environment Social concerns and peer influences Cognition or thoughts Emotions • Research in health psychology has established that each of these factors predicts adherence in high quality studies (systematic reviews etc) – – – – Forgetting (environmental cues) Social support Beliefs about medicine and illness Depression Two types of non-adherence • Unintentional non-adherence, such as forgetting – We intend to take our medicine, but someone rings us and we get distracted; or we are in a new location etc – We are unable to do the physical things required, such as using an inhaler properly is quite difficult • Intentional non-adherence – not wanting to get addicted to medication – not believing they are worth it – being too worried about side effects – misperceptions about what caused the illness Examples of misperceptions: Medication holidays? 3. People who take medicines should stop their treatment for a while every now and then 74 Pharmacists Patients 30 0% 20% Disagree/Strongly disagree 22 41 40% Uncertain 4 29 60% 80% 100% Agree/Strongly agree * From: Ramstrom, Afandai, Elofsson, Petersson (2006). Differences in beliefs between patients and pharmaceutical specialists regarding medications. Patient Education and Counseling, 62, 244-249. Examples of misperceptions: Addictive? 6. Most medicines are addictive Pharmacists 92 Patients 49 0% 20% Disagree/Strongly disagree 4 4 34 40% Uncertain 60% 17 80% 100% Agree/Strongly agree * From: Ramstrom, Afandai, Elofsson, Petersson (2006). Differences in beliefs between patients and pharmaceutical specialists regarding medications. Patient Education and Counseling, 62, 244-249. Interventions? • Lots of excellent research targets unintentional nonadherence – Text reminders – Colour-coded pill boxes etc. • But is unintentional non-adherence the main problem? – How do you change intentional non-adherence? – Need to use the certain skillset • Elicit beliefs, clarifying misperceptions • Not the same as simple patient education! Can psychological interventions improve adherence? • Pilot randomised trial to increase adherence in stroke patients, using MEMS at 3-months • 62 patients randomised to: – Control group: 2 sessions addressing non-medication-related conversation • e.g. what had happened when they had their stroke – Intervention group: 2 sessions addressing • a plan linked to environmental cues (implementation intentions) • eliciting and modifying any mistaken patient beliefs regarding medication/stroke O’Carroll et al, Ann Beh Med, DOI 10.1007/s12160-013-9515-5 Intervention: session 1 • Implementation intentions – ‘If-then’ plans • Enhances memory through environmental cues, developing habits O’Carroll et al, Ann Beh Med, DOI 10.1007/s12160-013-9515-5 Intervention: session 2 • Reviewed effectiveness of ‘if-then’ plans – Barriers/difficulties • Then, elicit and challenge mistaken beliefs about illness or medication • Mistaken beliefs: – Cause/effects of stroke – Toxicity/dependence of drugs • E.g. ‘why should I take statins if my cholesterol is normal’ • Goal: to make necessity beliefs outweigh medication concerns beliefs O’Carroll et al, Ann Beh Med, DOI 10.1007/s12160-013-9515-5 Results • • • % of doses taken on schedule significantly higher for intervention group Mean difference 9.8%, 95 % CI 0.2 to 16.2, p=.048 5% increases in pills taken, and % days correct dose taken; ns O’Carroll et al, Ann Beh Med, DOI 10.1007/s12160-013-9515-5 Useful? • ‘increasing adherence by one (antihypertensive) pill per week for a once-a-day regimen reduces the hazard of stroke by 8–9 % and death by 7%’ – Bailey et al, J Gen Intern Med. 2010;25:495-503. Is it that simple? • No – but it’s a start • May not address other issues: – Depression, social support, etc – Adherence is about more than medication • Currently, it is unclear which predictor of nonadherence is the most important • Large research studies needed to clarify these issues Example: Impact of depression on smoking cessation in CHD patients • 20 prospective studies • Depressed patients far less likely to quit smoking than nondepressed patients – Probably impacts on prognosis Doyle et al, Psychosom Med, in press Conclusions • Adherence is a complex behaviour – Requires complex interventions • Technology can assist with unintentional nonadherence • But people with special skillsets are needed to address intentional non-adherence – Can increase adherence significantly – Resource issues – requires training, and time