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Adherence or Compliance Behavior Health Article
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ADHERENCE OR COMPLIANCE BEHAVIORHippocrates once wrote that patients often lied about taking their medicine. Adherence to medication was a big problem then, and still is today. Indeed, one of the most challenging problems facing physicians is their ability to improve patient compliance with prescribed regimens. Estimates for nonadherence across diverse areas of treatment range from a low of 4 percent to a high of 92 percent, with an average ranging from 30 to 60 percent. Adherence rates for preventive health behaviors are generally lower than those behaviors Given that many diseases are preventable, curable, or at least treatable, patient adherence is often a crucial step toward improving treatment status and achieving good health. The diagnosis, the carefully weighted treatment plan, and the expanded time and effort in patient education all become wasted efforts if a patient does not adhere to the prescriptions and proscriptions recommended by a health care provider. Gerald H. Friedland and Ann Williams identified adherence as the "greatest barrier to overall therapeutic success" (1999, p. S64). BACKGROUNDAdherence became a topic of considerable research by multidisciplinary teams beginning in the 1970s, when studies showed that as many as 50 percent of patients diagnosed with hypertension were not taking sufficient amounts of their antihypertensive medication, and that nonadherence was common, particularly with long-term treatments for conditions such as diabetes, asthma, hypertension, and HIV/AIDS (human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). What is adherence and why do many patients fail to comply with a medication regimen? Adherence to medical recommendations has been defined as the extent to which a person's behavior coincides with medical or health advice, such as taking medication regularly, returning to a doctor's office for follow-up appointments, and observing preventive and healthful lifestyle changes. Despite the positive health benefits that adherence engenders, however, many patients fail to adhere or comply to medical advice for a variety of reasons. With the advent of complex treatment regimens for HIV infection (often characterized as among the most complicated long-term regimens in history), and the risk of drug resistance resulting from missed doses, research on adherence has centered on who is and is not likely to be adherent, how adherent one needs to be in order to prevent drug resistance, and what strategies are likely to work for improving adherence. Controversial ethical issues have emerged regarding the provision of complex treatments to HIV/AIDS patients who may seem unable to adhere to them, and possibly contributing to the passing of resistant HIV strains to others. Drug formulation and regimens that allow for simplified dosing have become a research priority, and novel devices and techniques have been developed that can assist patients in adhering to medication regimens. CAUSES OF NONADHERENCEStudies of nonadherence indicate that from 10 to 90 percent of patients do not fully follow their doctor's orders. Most researchers agree that at least half of all patients do not take their prescribed drugs correctly. Adherence to lifestyle regimens such as diet and exercise is probably far worse. It is difficult to predict who will adhere to a given course of medication and who will not. According to most published studies, adherence does not correlate with age, sex, race, occupation, education, income level, or socioeconomic status. Even homelessness is not an indicator of a low likelihood of adherence in all patients; given appropriate access to treatment, encouragement, and rewards, homeless individuals can be as adherent as any group. In fact, about the only good indicator of future adherence is how a patient has behaved in the past. The five most common types of nonadherence with medication are: 1) failing to have a prescription filled, (2) taking an incomplete dose,(3) taking the medication at the wrong time, (4) forgetting to take one or more medications, and(5) stopping the medication. Each of these behaviors requires individual consideration in order to formulate strategies to enhance patient compliance. Failure to obtain a medication is especially problematic in patients with asymptomatic conditions, such as hypertension or latent tuberculosis. The health care provider must reinforce the importance of taking medications daily, even if one does not "feel sick," to prevent the effects of target organ damage or developing resistant strains of the infection. Once a patient obtains a medication, the two most common nonadherence behaviors include omitting one or more doses or taking a While partial compliance is intentional in a minority of patients, in others, such as the elderly, it is often unintentional. Forgetting to take a medication is the most common cause of taking insufficient medication in this population and is attributed to such factors as using more than one pharmacy, seeing different physicians, confusion regarding the regimen, inaccurately labeled containers, and the inability to open childproof containers. The health care provider must make special efforts during the patient visit to address these potential concerns related to nonadherence. |
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