Abstract
Background: Medication
non-adherence poses a significant
challenge in healthcare, leading
to suboptimal treatment outcomes.
This systematic review aims
to evaluate the effectiveness
of different interventions
in improving medication adherence.
Methodology:
A comprehensive search was
conducted to identify relevant
studies. Inclusion criteria
encompassed interventions
targeting medication adherence
and reporting quantitative
measures of adherence outcomes.
The selected studies were
assessed for quality, and
data were extracted for analysis.
Results:
The review included a total
of 14 studies. Interventions
involving tailored phone calls
or educational materials did
not yield significant improvements
in medication adherence. Conversely,
interventions such as face-to-face
counseling sessions and self-management
programs showed promise in
improving adherence. Nurse-led
interventions and pharmacist-led
consultations did not demonstrate
significant improvements.
Similarly, interventions involving
stroke physician specialist
assessments, behavioral feedback,
medication reviews, and motivational
interviewing did not yield
significant improvements.
A pooled analysis of various
interventions across different
healthcare settings showed
a moderate but not statistically
significant difference in
medication adherence.
Conclusion:
The findings from this systematic
review suggest that interventions
tailored to individual patient
characteristics and involving
personalized support and education
show promise in improving
medication adherence. However,
interventions relying solely
on tailored phone calls, educational
materials, nurse-led care,
pharmacist-led consultations,
stroke physician specialist
assessments, behavioral feedback,
medication reviews, or motivational
interviewing may not consistently
improve adherence.
Keywords:
Medication Adherence, Patient
Compliance, Family Medicine,
Education, Behavioral Modification.
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