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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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      Qualitative evaluation of adherence therapy in Parkinson’s disease: a multidirectional model

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          Abstract

          Background

          Medication can control the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Despite this, non-adherence with medication is prevalent in PD. Treatments for improving adherence with medication have been investigated in many chronic conditions, including PD. However, few researchers have evaluated their interventions qualitatively. We investigated the acceptability and potential mechanism of action of adherence therapy (AT) in PD patients and their spouse/carers who received the intervention as part of a randomized controlled trial.

          Methods

          Sixteen participants (ten patients and six spouses/carers) who had recently completed the trial were purposely selected in order to cover a range of ages and disease severity. Semi-structured interviews were conducted in the participants’ homes. Data were transcribed and analyzed using a thematic approach. A second researcher, naïve to PD and AT, analyzed the data independently to limit bias.

          Results

          The trial showed that AT significantly improved both medication adherence and quality of life in people with PD. Specifically, patients who received AT reported improvements in mobility, activities of daily living, emotional wellbeing, cognition, communication, and body discomfort. General beliefs about medication also significantly improved in those who received AT compared with controls. In the current qualitative evaluation, a total of 175 codes were generated, which formed eleven subthemes. These could be grouped under three overarching themes, ie, perceptions prior to AT, positive effects of AT, and attributes of AT.

          Conclusion

          This randomized controlled trial is the first to investigate AT in PD. The acceptability and underlying mechanism of the intervention suggest a new multidirectional model of AT in PD which future research should seek to confirm. The findings provide a deeper understanding of AT and will allow clinicians to modify the delivery of the intervention by acknowledging various pathways to improved outcomes.

          Most cited references20

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          Interventions to enhance medication adherence in chronic medical conditions: a systematic review.

          Approximately 20% to 50% of patients are not adherent to medical therapy. This review was performed to summarize, categorize, and estimate the effect size (ES) of interventions to improve medication adherence in chronic medical conditions. Randomized controlled trials published from January 1967 to September 2004 were eligible if they described 1 or more unconfounded interventions intended to enhance adherence with self-administered medications in the treatment of chronic medical conditions. Trials that reported at least 1 measure of medication adherence and 1 clinical outcome, with at least 80% follow-up during 6 months, were included. Study characteristics and results for adherence and clinical outcomes were extracted. In addition, ES was calculated for each outcome. Among 37 eligible trials (including 12 informational, 10 behavioral, and 15 combined informational, behavioral, and/or social investigations), 20 studies reported a significant improvement in at least 1 adherence measure. Adherence increased most consistently with behavioral interventions that reduced dosing demands (3 of 3 studies, large ES [0.89-1.20]) and those involving monitoring and feedback (3 of 4 studies, small to large ES [0.27-0.81]). Adherence also improved in 6 multisession informational trials (small to large ES [0.35-1.13]) and 8 combined interventions (small to large ES [absolute value, 0.43-1.20]). Eleven studies (4 informational, 3 behavioral, and 4 combined) demonstrated improvement in at least 1 clinical outcome, but effects were variable (very small to large ES [0.17-3.41]) and not consistently related to changes in adherence. Several types of interventions are effective in improving medication adherence in chronic medical conditions, but few significantly affected clinical outcomes.
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            Adherence to antiparkinson medication in a multicenter European study.

            Two small studies reported suboptimal therapy adherence in Parkinson's disease. We conducted a larger multicenter European study to assess medicine-taking behavior. Parkinson's disease patients taking dopaminergic therapy were enrolled in 8 centers in 5 countries, and disease severity and demographics recorded. Antiparkinson drug adherence was measured for 4 weeks using electronic monitoring bottles which record the date and time of cap opening (Aardex, Switzerland). One hundred twelve patients, mean age 65 years (standard deviation (SD) 10), with Parkinson's disease for 7.7 (SD 8.2) years completed the study. Total median adherence (doses taken/doses prescribed) was 97.7% (interquartile range [IQ] 90.6-100), days adherence (correct dose days) was 86.2% (IQ 61.1-96.2) and timing adherence (doses taken at correct time intervals) was 24.4% (IQ 5.3-56.5). Fourteen patients (12.5%) took less than 80% of prescribed doses, which was defined as suboptimal adherence. Patients with satisfactory adherence took a median of 8 mg/day (IQ 0-33) less than their prescribed dose of levodopa (P = NS), while suboptimal adherence patients took a median of 481 mg/day (IQ 205-670) less than their prescribed dose (P = 0.0006). The Parkinson motor score was significantly higher in patients with suboptimal adherence at 29 (IQ 20-40), versus those with satisfactory adherence at 19 (IQ 13-26), P = 0.005. Once daily drugs had significantly better adherence when compared with drugs prescribed more frequently (P < 0.0001). Suboptimal therapy adherence is associated with significant deviation from prescribed levodopa doses, despite greater Parkinson's motor severity. Optimizing oral medication intake has a potential role in maximizing the therapy response in Parkinson's disease. (c) 2009 Movement Disorder Society.
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              Systematic review on factors associated with medication non-adherence in Parkinson's disease.

              Medication non-adherence is prevalent in Parkinson's disease (PD) and results in substantial motor dysfunction. Although various approaches have been suggested to address non-adherence in PD, good quality evidence of associated factors is limited. To systematically review the literature on clinical and demographic factors associated with medication non-adherence in PD. We searched five online databases in April 2011 (updated in January 2012): MEDLINE, EMBASE, AMED, PsycINFO and CINAHL for studies reporting data on factors associated with medication non-adherence in people with idiopathic PD. Bibliographies were hand searched to acquire records not identified electronically. Two reviewers independently assessed identified articles for potential inclusion. Data extraction was undertaken using a standardised data extraction form. Methodological quality was assessed against a specially designed quality indicator tool emphasising the detection of threats to internal validity. We identified 1880 records of which six met inclusion criteria. A total of 772 PD patients were included (mean age 62 years, males 61%). We identified eleven factors (six clinical and five demographic) associated with non-adherence. We ranked each factor in order by weight of overall evidence: mood disorders, cognition, poor symptom control/QoL, younger age/longer disease duration, regimen complexity/polypharmacy, risk taking behaviours, poor knowledge of PD/education, lack of spouse/partner, low income, maintaining employment and gender. Clinicians should be aware of factors associated with medication non-adherence in PD. Targeted interventions should be developed and investigated to establish if addressing factors associated with non-adherence in PD leads to greater medication adherence. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient Prefer Adherence
                Patient Preference and Adherence
                Patient preference and adherence
                Dove Medical Press
                1177-889X
                2015
                10 July 2015
                : 9
                : 989-998
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Norwich Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park
                [2 ]Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, UK
                [3 ]School of Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, UK
                [4 ]Hamad Medical Corporation, Doha, Qatar
                [5 ]Epidemiology Group, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Institute of Applied Health Sciences, College of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence: David James Daley, Norwich Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, UK, Tel +44 1603 286 143, Email d.daley@ 123456uea.ac.uk
                Article
                ppa-9-989
                10.2147/PPA.S80158
                4508072
                def8019c-5d76-4f29-9255-a0f51a854817
                © 2015 Daley et al. 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
                parkinson’s disease,medication,adherence therapy,acceptability,mechanisms
                Medicine
                parkinson’s disease, medication, adherence therapy, acceptability, mechanisms

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