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      Patient Preference and Adherence (submit here)

      This international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal by Dove Medical Press focuses on the growing importance of patient preference and adherence throughout the therapeutic process. Sign up for email alerts here.

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      Electronically monitored medication adherence predicts hospitalization in heart failure patients

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          Abstract

          Background

          Hospitalization contributes enormously to health care costs associated with heart failure. Many investigators have attempted to predict hospitalization in these patients. None of these models has been highly effective in prediction, suggesting that important risk factors remain unidentified.

          Purpose

          To assess prospectively collected medication adherence, objectively measured by the Medication Event Monitoring System, as a predictor of hospitalization in heart failure patients.

          Materials and methods

          We used recently developed adaptive modeling methods to describe patterns of medication adherence in a sample of heart failure patients, and tested the hypothesis that poor medication adherence as determined by adaptive methods was a significant predictor of hospitalization within 6 months.

          Results

          Medication adherence was the best predictor of hospitalization. Besides two dimensions of poor adherence (adherence pattern type and low percentage of prescribed doses taken), four other single factors predicted hospitalization: low hemoglobin, depressed ejection fraction, New York Heart Association class IV, and 12 or more medications taken daily. Seven interactions increased the predictive capability of the model: 1) pattern of poor adherence type and lower score on the Letter–Number Sequencing test, a measure of short-term memory; 2) higher number of comorbid conditions and higher number of daily medications; 3) higher blood urea nitrogen and lower percentage of prescribed doses taken; 4) lower hemoglobin and much worse perceived health compared to last year; 5) older age and lower score on the Telephone Interview of Cognitive Status; 6) higher body mass index and lower hemoglobin; and 7) lower ejection fraction and higher fatigue. Patients with none of these seven interactions had a hospitalization rate of 9.7%. For those with five of these interaction risk factors, 100% were hospitalized. The C-index (the area under the receiver-operating characteristics [ROC] curve) for the model based on the seven interactions was 0.83, indicating excellent discrimination.

          Conclusion

          Medication adherence adds important new information to the list of variables previously shown to predict hospitalization in adults with heart failure.

          Most cited references50

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          Applied Logistic Regression

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            Adherence to long-term therapies: evidence for action.

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              Forecasting the impact of heart failure in the United States: a policy statement from the American Heart Association.

              Heart failure (HF) is an important contributor to both the burden and cost of national healthcare expenditures, with more older Americans hospitalized for HF than for any other medical condition. With the aging of the population, the impact of HF is expected to increase substantially. We estimated future costs of HF by adapting a methodology developed by the American Heart Association to project the epidemiology and future costs of HF from 2012 to 2030 without double counting the costs attributed to comorbid conditions. The model assumes that HF prevalence will remain constant by age, sex, and race/ethnicity and that rising costs and technological innovation will continue at the same rate. By 2030, >8 million people in the United States (1 in every 33) will have HF. Between 2012 and 2030, real (2010$) total direct medical costs of HF are projected to increase from $21 billion to $53 billion. Total costs, including indirect costs for HF, are estimated to increase from $31 billion in 2012 to $70 billion in 2030. If one assumes all costs of cardiac care for HF patients are attributable to HF (no cost attribution to comorbid conditions), the 2030 projected cost estimates of treating patients with HF will be 3-fold higher ($160 billion in direct costs). The estimated prevalence and cost of care for HF will increase markedly because of aging of the population. Strategies to prevent HF and improve the efficiency of care are needed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient preference and adherence
                Dove Medical Press
                1177-889X
                2014
                05 December 2013
                : 8
                : 1-13
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Philadelphia, PA, USA
                [2 ]University of Pennsylvania Leonard Davis Institute, Philadelphia, PA, USA
                [3 ]University of North Carolina School of Nursing, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Barbara Riegel, University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, 418 Curie Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA 19104-4217, USA, Tel +1 215 898 9927, Fax +1 240 282 7707, Email briegel@ 123456nursing.upenn.edu
                Article
                ppa-8-001
                10.2147/PPA.S54520
                3862652
                24353407
                3321b82b-1d80-4e23-ae9f-d1f7fb367f0b
                © 2014 Riegel and Knafl. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License

                The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.

                History
                Categories
                Original Research

                Medicine
                outcomes,hospitalization,medication adherence,self-care,heart failure,patient compliance
                Medicine
                outcomes, hospitalization, medication adherence, self-care, heart failure, patient compliance

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