Author:
Nosé Michela,Barbui Corrado,Gray Richard,Tansella Michele
Abstract
BackgroundStudies investigating the efficacy of clinical interventions for reducing treatment non-adherence have generated contrasting findings, and treatment non-adherence remains common in clinical practice.AimsTo systematically review whether there are effective clinical interventions that community psychiatric services can implement to reduce non-adherence.MethodSystematic review and metaregression analysis of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and controlled clinical trials (CCTs) were used to assess the efficacy of interventions to enhance adherence.ResultsWe reviewed 24 studies, more than half of which were RCTs. In 14 studies the experimental intervention was an educational programme. Five studies evaluated pre-discharge educational sessions, three studies explored the benefit of psychotherapeutic interventions and two studies looked at the effect of telephone prompts. The overall estimate of the efficacy of these interventions produced an odds ratio of 2.59 (95% Cl 2.21–3.03) for dichotomous outcomes, and a standardised mean difference of 0.36 (95% Cl 0.06–0.66) for continuous outcomes.ConclusionsCommunity psychiatric services can potentially use effective clinical interventions, backed by scientific evidence, for reducing patient non-adherence.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
139 articles.
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