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Digital Home-Monitoring of Patients after Kidney Transplantation: The MACCS Platform
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Cardiovascular medication: improving adherence.

Liam Glynn1, Tom Fahey

  • 1National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.

BMJ Clinical Evidence
|April 13, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Improving medication adherence in cardiovascular disease patients is crucial. This review examines interventions like education and reminder packaging to enhance long-term medication adherence for better health outcomes.

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Using Continuous Data Tracking Technology to Study Exercise Adherence in Pulmonary Rehabilitation
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Published on: November 8, 2013

Area of Science:

  • Cardiology
  • Pharmacology
  • Public Health

Background:

  • Medication adherence is critical for managing cardiovascular disease.
  • Adherence is defined as taking medications as prescribed.
  • Various methods exist to measure medication adherence.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To systematically review interventions aimed at improving medication adherence in adults with cardiovascular disease.
  • To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of different adherence-enhancing strategies.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic review of 39 studies including systematic reviews, RCTs, and observational studies.
  • Searched major databases (Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library) up to April 2010.
  • Included harms alerts from regulatory agencies (FDA, MHRA).

Main Results:

  • Identified various interventions for improving medication adherence.
  • Evaluated the quality of evidence for these interventions using GRADE.

Conclusions:

  • Patient and prescriber education can improve adherence.
  • Prompting mechanisms and reminder packaging (e.g., blister packs) are effective.
  • Simplified dosing strategies also contribute to better medication adherence.