Is there an impatience genotype leading to non-adherence to long-term therapies?
- PMID: 20407742
- DOI: 10.1007/s00125-010-1755-3
Is there an impatience genotype leading to non-adherence to long-term therapies?
Abstract
In chronic diseases such as diabetes, adherence to therapy aims to preserve health, which is a long-term objective, whereas non-adherence tends to present an immediate 'reward'. We propose that non-adherence, like addiction, is at least in part due to the fact that, for physiological, and maybe genetic reasons described in a new field, neuroeconomics, a number of people have a taste for the present rather than the future. Thus, for 'impatient patients' it is natural not to adhere to therapeutic prescriptions that share the characteristic of being future-oriented. This hypothesis may apply to any disease requiring long-term therapy.
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