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Cohort study
Self-reported medication adherence for heart failure is associated with lower risk of all-cause hospitalisation and death
  1. Bradi B Granger
  1. Correspondence to : Professor Bradi B Granger, Duke University School of Nursing and Duke University Health System, 307 Trent Drive, Durham, NC 27710, USA; bradi.granger{at}duke.edu

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Implications for practice and research

  • Poor medication adherence is associated with rehospitalisation and death.

  • A single-item self-report medication adherence question provides an efficient indicator to identify patients who may benefit from adherence interventions.

  • Researchers can more reliably scale and evaluate adherence interventions across settings and populations if a single question is consistently applied to assess medication use.

Context

Medication adherence in chronic illness is poor, with 40–60% of patients unable to fully adhere to medications.1 Despite decades of research, providers lack tools to identify patients at risk of poor adherence. As a result, allocation of limited resources to help patients is challenging.

Methods

The purpose of this study was to determine whether responses to a single-item self-report medication adherence question were associated with hospitalisation and death in patients …

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.