Evaluation of methods measuring medication adherence in patients with polypharmacy: a longitudinal and patient perspective

Laura Mortelmans*, Eva Goossens, Marjan De Graef, Jana Van Dingenen, Anne Marie De Cock, Mirko Petrovic, Patricia van den Bemt, Tinne Dilles

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
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Abstract

Purpose: To explore patients’ willingness to have medication adherence measured using different methods and evaluate the feasibility and validity of their combination (i.e., pill counts, a medication diary and a questionnaire assessing adherence two months post-discharge). 

Methods: (1) A cross-sectional evaluation of the willingness of patients with polypharmacy to have their medication adherence measured post-discharge. (2) Medication adherence was monitored during two months using pill counts based on preserved medication packages and a diary in which patients registered their adherence-related problems. During a home visit, the Probabilistic Medication Adherence Scale (ProMAS) and a questionnaire on feasibility were administered. 

Results: A total of 144 participants completed the questionnaire at discharge. The majority was willing to communicate truthfully about their adherence (97%) and to share adherence-related information with healthcare providers (99%). More participants were willing to preserve medication packages (76%) than to complete a medication diary (67%) during two months. Most participants reported that preserving medication packages (91%), completing the diary (99%) and the ProMAS (99%) were no effort to them. According to the majority of participants (60%), pill counts most accurately reflected medication adherence, followed by the diary (39%) and ProMAS (1%). Medication adherence measured by pill counts correlated significantly with ProMAS scores, but not with the number of diary-reported problems. However, adherence measured by the medication diary and ProMAS correlated significantly. 

Conclusion: Combining tools for measuring adherence seems feasible and can provide insight into the accordance of patients’ actual medication use with their prescribed regimen, but also into problems contributing to non-adherence.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)891-900
Number of pages10
JournalEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
Volume80
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun-2024

Keywords

  • Medication adherence
  • Patient-centered care
  • Polypharmacy
  • Self-management

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