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Review
. 2024 Nov 22;12(23):2337.
doi: 10.3390/healthcare12232337.

Nurse-Led Interventions for Improving Medication Adherence in Chronic Diseases: A Systematic Review

Affiliations
Review

Nurse-Led Interventions for Improving Medication Adherence in Chronic Diseases: A Systematic Review

Daniela Berardinelli et al. Healthcare (Basel). .

Abstract

Background: Poor medication adherence results in negative health outcomes and increased healthcare costs. Several healthcare professionals provide interventions to improve medication adherence, with the effectiveness of nurse-led interventions in people with chronic diseases remaining unclear. Objective: This study sought to evaluate the effectiveness of nurse-led interventions for improving medication adherence in adults with chronic conditions. Methods: Five databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, SCOPUS) were searched without applying a temporal limit. Studies evaluating the effects of nurse-led interventions on medication adherence in adults with one or multiple chronic conditions were included. Interventions only targeting a single acute disease were excluded. Results: A total of twenty-two studies with 5975 participants were included. Statistically significant improvements in adherence were reported in five out of seven studies involving face-to-face visits to patients with heart failure (n = 2), chronic myeloid leukemia (n = 1), hypertension (n = 1) and multimorbidity (n = 1) and in four out of nine studies adopting a mixed method involving face-to-face visits and telephone follow-up for patients with heart failure (n = 1), hypertension (n = 1), coronary disease (n = 1) and multimorbidity (n = 1). Remote interventions were effective in improving medication adherence in one out of six studies. No statistically significant differences were found between tablet computer-based patient education and nurse-led educational sessions. The motivational approach was found to be one of the most common strategies used to promote patient medication adherence. Conclusions: Nurse-led face-to-face visits may be effective in improving medication adherence in people with chronic diseases. However, further research is needed because current methods for measuring medication adherence may not accurately capture patient behaviour and medication consumption patterns.

Keywords: chronic disease; medication adherence; medication review; nurse-patient relations; patient compliance; self medication.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow diagram of the study selection.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Bias assessment of the selected studies. Symbols and colours represent the risk-of-bias assessment for individual studies: “+” (green) indicates low risk of bias, “!” (yellow) indicates unclear risk of bias, and “-“ (red) indicates high risk of bias.

References

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