Medication Adherence in New Zealand Older Adults: Effects of an External Cognitive Support
-
Published:2005-01
Issue:2
Volume:11
Page:69-83
-
ISSN:1323-8922
-
Container-title:The Australian Journal of Rehabilitation Counselling
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:The Australian Journal of Rehabilitation Counselling
Author:
Greyvenstein June,Kazantzis Nikolaos,Pachana Nancy A.
Abstract
Pharmacotherapy is the most frequently used treatment modality among the older adult population. Consequently, medication adherence represents an important treatment consideration. The present study was conducted to assess the extent of medication adherence in the New Zealand sample, and evaluate the effectiveness of an external cognitive support in a sample of 50 community-dwelling older adults (M = 70.70, Mdn = 72.00, SD = 8.12). A randomised controlled trial to compare the usual medication practice with a medication calendar was conducted. The present sample had high levels of medication adherence, with high adherence measured on an adherence ratio 97% (range 82% to 109%), and low rate of medication errors (19 errors). There were no significant differences in medication adherence between intervention and control groups (ps > .05). However, consistent with prior research, there was some evidence to suggest that female participants were less compliant and made more errors than male participants. Further research on larger more representative older adult samples is warranted.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
Reference48 articles.
1. Non-compliance—or how many aunts has Matilda?
2. Drug related problems in the elderly at all levels of care;Cooper;Journal of Geriatric Drug Therapy,1990
3. Compliance with prescribed medication by elderly patients;Kendrick;Canadian Medical Association Journal,1982
4. Programs to reduce drug errors in the elderly: Direct and indirect evidence from patient education;Green;Journal of Geriatric Drug Therapy,1986