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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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      A literature review to explore the link between treatment satisfaction and adherence, compliance, and persistence

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          To explore the published evidence on the link between treatment satisfaction and patients’ compliance, adherence, and/or persistence.

          Methods

          Articles published from January 2005 to November 2010 assessing compliance, adherence, or persistence and treatment satisfaction were identified through literature searches in Medline, Embase, and PsycInfo. Abstracts were reviewed by two independent researchers who selected articles for inclusion. The main attributes of each study examining the link between satisfaction and adherence, compliance, or persistence were summarized.

          Results

          The database searches yielded 1278 references. Of the 281 abstracts that met the inclusion criteria, 20 articles were retained. In the articles, adherence and compliance were often used interchangeably and various methods were used to measure these concepts. All showed a positive association between treatment satisfaction and adherence, compliance, or persistence. Sixteen studies demonstrated a statistically significant link between satisfaction and compliance or persistence. Of these, ten demonstrated a significant link between satisfaction and compliance, two showed a significant link between satisfaction and persistence, and eight demonstrated a link between either a related aspect or a component of satisfaction (eg, treatment convenience) or adherence (eg, intention to persist). An equal number of studies aimed at explaining compliance or persistence according to treatment satisfaction (n = 8) and treatment satisfaction explained by compliance or persistence (n = 8). Four studies only reported correlation coefficients, with no hypothesis about the direction of the link. The methods used to evaluate the link were varied: two studies reported the link using descriptive statistics, such as percentages, and 18 used statistical tests, such as Spearman’s correlation or logistic regressions.

          Conclusion

          This review identified few studies that evaluate the statistical association between satisfaction and adherence, compliance, or persistence. The available data suggested that greater treatment satisfaction was associated with better compliance and improved persistence, and with lower regimen complexity or treatment burden.

          Most cited references37

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          Adherence to long-term therapies: evidence for action.

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            Patient satisfaction: a review of issues and concepts.

            This review presents issues arising from an analysis of over 100 papers published in the field of patient satisfaction. The published output appearing in the medical and nursing literature which incorporated the term "patient satisfaction" rose to a peak of over 1000 papers annually in 1994, reflecting changes in service management especially in the U.K. and U.S.A. over the past decade. An introductory section discusses the setting and measurement of patient satisfaction within this wider context of changes in service delivery. Various models are examined that have attempted to define and interpret the idea of determining individual perceptions of the quality of health care delivered. Determinants of satisfaction are examined in relation to the literature on expectations, and demographic and psychosocial variables. These are distinguished from the multidimensional components of satisfaction as aspects of the delivery of care, identified by many authors. The review highlights the complexity and breadth of the literature in this field, the existence of which is often not acknowledged by researchers presenting the findings of studies.
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              Medication adherence leads to lower health care use and costs despite increased drug spending.

              Researchers have routinely found that improved medication adherence--getting people to take medicine prescribed for them--is associated with greatly reduced total health care use and costs. But previous studies do not provide strong evidence of a causal link. This article employs a more robust methodology to examine the relationship. Our results indicate that although improved medication adherence by people with four chronic vascular diseases increased pharmacy costs, it also produced substantial medical savings as a result of reductions in hospitalization and emergency department use. Our findings indicate that programs to improve medication adherence are worth consideration by insurers, government payers, and patients, as long as intervention costs do not exceed the estimated health care cost savings.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient preference and adherence
                Dove Medical Press
                1177-889X
                2012
                13 January 2012
                : 6
                : 39-48
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Mapi Consultancy, Lyon, France
                [2 ]Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland
                [3 ]Mapi Values UK, Macclesfield, Cheshire, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Carla Dias Barbosa, Mapi Consultancy, 27 rue de la Villette, 69003 Lyon, France, Tel +33 4 7213 6656, Fax +33 4 7213 5140, Email cdias@ 123456mapigroup.com
                Article
                ppa-6-039
                10.2147/PPA.S24752
                3262489
                22272068
                52e294e8-4608-490c-b7f4-259803728d07
                © 2012 Dias Barbosa et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

                This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Review

                Medicine
                adherence,compliance,persistence,treatment satisfaction
                Medicine
                adherence, compliance, persistence, treatment satisfaction

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