A clinician's guide to the assessment and management of nonadherence in glaucoma
- PMID: 19837260
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2009.06.022
A clinician's guide to the assessment and management of nonadherence in glaucoma
Abstract
Purpose: To apply lessons learned in the treatment of systemic hypertension to the problem of nonadherence in glaucoma medical therapy.
Clinical relevance: Although physicians recognize that nonadherence with glaucoma medication is a problem, most lack the skill set to identify nonadherent patients, to identify the causes of nonadherence, and to provide solutions to address nonadherence.
Methods: A PubMed search was conducted using the terms "adherence" OR "compliance" AND "hypertension," with the following limitations: title, English language, humans, from 2000 through 2009. Other studies identified outside of the PubMed search were included if relevant.
Results: Studies from the systemic hypertension literature suggest that simplifying medication regimens, lowering costs, and patient education about the disease and the importance of taking medications are successful strategies for improving adherence. In addition, good family or social support, frequent physician visits, and pairing medication administration with specific activities (such as meals or brushing one's teeth) can help improve adherence.
Conclusions: The body of literature on adherence interventions in chronic diseases such as systemic hypertension shows that although many interventions have been tested and evaluated, only some are successful. Paradigms derived from behavioral medicine and nursing offer valuable lessons on how to motivate patients to change behavior, but these activities require skill sets not traditionally taught in medical school. Just as there are myriad causes of nonadherence, the interventions most likely will need to be multifaceted and tailored to the individual patient.
Financial disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found after the references.
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