No Magic Pill to Cure Poor Medication Adherence

You are sick with something-or-other and your doctor writes you a prescription for a medication.  She briefly tells you what it’s for and how to take it.  You go to the pharmacy, pick up the medication, go home and follow the instructions, right?  I mean, how hard could it be?

Pretty hard, it appears.  Between 20 percent to 80 percent of us â€" differing by disease and drug â€" don’t seem to be able to do it.

There are, of course, many reasons we aren’t.  Drugs are sometimes too pricey, so we don’t fill the prescription. Or we buy them and then apply our ingenuity to making them last longer by splitting pills and otherwise experimenting with the dosage.

Some drugs have to be taken at specific times or under specific conditions, posing little challenge when you are taking only one.  But it can be devilishly difficult to coordinate the green pill half an hour before breakfast, the yellow ones on an empty stomach four times a day and the orange one with a snack between meals.  It’s complicated; we don’t understand.  We’re busy; we forget. We’re sick; it’s confusing.

Some drugs produce uncomfortable side effects while others set off an allergic reaction. Every single day, we have to decide if the promised outcomes are worth the discomfort.

Kate Lorig, the developer of the Chronic Disease Self-Management Program, has listened to thousands of people talk about the challenges they face in taking their medications as prescribed.  “One of the reasons that folks do not take their meds is that they think they are not doing anything,” Lorig says. “This is especially true of medications that replace something that you no longer produce like thyroxin or medications for chronic conditions that help you get worse more slowly.   The trajectory of a disease is not something one can usually sense, and people start feeling that their drugs are not making them better. Another problem is that people expect drugs to work at once like aspirin and antibiotics.   Many drugs take days, weeks or even months for people to feel better.  They lose patience.”

Depression also plays a significant role: a meta-analysis published last week found that people with chronic conditions and who also were depressed were 1.76 times more likely to be non-adherent compared to people with chronic conditions who were not depressed.  This finding is particularly important because while depression is common in the general population, it is much higher in those over 65, who are also more likely to have additional chronic conditions, most of which require medications to manage and treat.

And then there are people like me who physically struggle to take pills.  I have a lazy swallowing reflex as the result of radiation to my throat, and I frequently gag on even small tablets.  And so I approach every single pill I take with a vivid fear of choking to death on it.  Good excuse for not following my chemotherapy regimen, no?

Add to this list of common explanations for why we don’t take our drugs as directed the media messages and cultural tropes that feed our ambivalence: “Drugs are dangerous!  What looks safe now may turn out to hurt you in the long run…remember Vioxx?”  “Ask your doctor about this drug that will make you feel calm and confident about a) your sexuality; b) your bathroom needs; c) your interpersonal relations; d) your eyelashes.” Then, compare my friend in excruciating pain from a spinal tumor who refuses strong pain medication because she doesn’t want to get addicted to it with the teenagers all over the country who seek out that same medication to ease the anxiety of growing up.

This is a complicated picture.

So it is no wonder that an encyclopedic Cochrane review that evaluated interventions to improve medication adherence found that “No one type of strategy improved medication use outcomes across all diseases, populations or settings, or for all outcomes.”  Think about it: What 10-page pamphlet, 10-minute counseling session or $10-off coupon could reliably help all of us overcome the barriers described above?

The review found that some strategies show modest promise: self-monitoring, greater pharmacist involvement, simplified dosing. Other strategies produce fewer (although some inconsistent) effects: reminders, skills training, financial incentives, use of lay health workers.  But research on medication adherence “is not well organized across diseases, populations and settings,” the review said, and “there are many gaps in the assembled evidence on medicines use strategies, such as those focusing on children, young people or carers, or those for people with more than one coexisting health problem.”

Unfortunately, this means that policy makers and health professionals have little guidance about what can be done to help us improve the way we use medications.

This is simply not good enough.

Ninety percent of American seniors and 58 percent of non-elderly adults use a prescription medication on a regular basis.  These numbers will increase as personalized medicine goes mainstream, offering us the opportunity to ingest exquisitely tailored medications that can counteract our genetic flaws to extend our lives.

Think about it: Hundreds of millions of dollars worth of research is translated into a drug that costs millions of dollars to produce, which in turn cost hundreds of dollars for a clinician to prescribe and tens of dollars for our health insurance to pay for â€" but the potential of that drug to alter the course of a disease depends on the actions of an individual: you, me, my friend with dementia, your aging neighbor, your grandchild with type 1 diabetes.  If we don’t take the drugs as directed, we don’t realize their benefit.

The nation has poured public and private money into basic research and drug development and invested heavily in training health care providers.  But as the Cochrane review demonstrates, the research that would strengthen the critical link between all those investments and the individuals who are ultimately responsible for ensuring that it has an effect is limping along: equivocal, uneven and irrelevant to many of those who stand to gain the most from the drugs available to them.   Meanwhile, such system-level remedies such as simple uniform medication labeling are lost in a morass of self-interested wrangling.

If the success of modern medicine to improve health relies so heavily on our actions, it’s time for more concerted, strategic approaches to reducing the significant barriers to us taking both the medicine and actions as recommended.

The systematic review found that there is no “magic pill” â€" no single intervention â€" that will solve the adherence problem.  Why should there be?  We know from other efforts to change complex behaviors, such as cigarette smoking, that it is only when a variety of approaches support, encourage, prompt and reward the new behaviors over time that significant numbers of people will adopt them.  Improving adherence will require a concerted effort by the pharmaceutical industry, health plans, pharmacists and clinicians to step up implementation of even mildly promising interventions to make it easier to follow recommendations.

The impetus for an increased investment to support medication adherence may, oddly enough, come from clinicians themselves.  With the advent of pay-for-performance and other incentives that link provider reimbursement to patient outcomes, we are no longer the only beneficiaries of the effective use of our drugs.  It is possible that this nudge will spark productive interactions between clinicians and patients about what and how the drugs they prescribe for us can be best used to help us prevent complications, slow the progress of our diseases and ease our suffering.

Jessie Gruman, PhD, is the founder and president of the Washington, DC -based Center for Advancing Health. She is the author of Aftershock: What to Do When You or Someone you Love is Diagnosed with a Devastating Diagnosis. She blogs regularly on the Prepared Patient Forum.

Filed Under: Consumers

Tagged: Jessie Gruman, Medication adherence, Patient Jun 9, 2011

Treatment and Prevention of Common Cold in Babies

There is no cure for common cold and antibiotics do not work against common cold causing viruses. If your baby is suffering from common cold, you can make your baby comfortable by suctioning the mucus that may block the nose and keep the air of the room, moist. Do not use OTC (over the counter) medications for your baby to treat common cold. Cough and cold medications are not safe in children and should be avoided. If your baby is also suffering from fever, you can use fever reducing (anti pyretic) medications, such as acetamenophene (paracetamol). The dosing schedules and directions of dosing should be properly followed if fever reducing medications are given to a child. Acetamenophene should be avoided in infants below 3 months of age. Another fever reducing medication that can be used in place of acetamenophene is ibuprofen, but this should be used in children above 6 months of age. In presence of dehydration the above mentioned medications should be avoided and given o nly after correcting dehydration.

The following steps can be taken to prevent common cold in babies:

  • Keep your baby away from persons who are sick. Also, do not allow any sick person to visit your infant baby. Public gathering and public transport should be avoided to avoid contact with sick persons.
  • It is important to remember that, common sense and plenty of soap water is important for preventing infection. Wash your hand (or anyone taking care of your baby) before touching your baby, with plenty of water and soap.
  • Keep toys of your baby clean and wash or clean them regularly.
  • Do not sneeze or cough inside your baby’s room and if it can not be avoided, sneeze in a tissue.
  • Do not sweep your baby’s room, instead wipe with water and disinfectants. Common cold spreads by droplet from cough or sneeze and these may settle on the floor and get disturbed when room is swept, so avoid sweeping.

Related posts:

  • Symptomatic Treatment of Common Cold
  • Common Cold in Babies
  • Prevention of Common Cold
  • Reduce Common Cold by Reducing Risk Factors
  • Complications of Common Cold in Babies
  • Symptoms of Common Cold
  • What is Common Cold?
  • Alternative Medicine in Treatment of Common Cold
  • Treatment of Common Cold
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  • Americans To Health Plans: Pay For The Pill

    Does your health insurance cover birth control pills?Enlarge iStockphoto.com

    Does your health insurance cover birth control pills?

    iStockphoto.com

    Does your health insurance cover birth control pills?

    After asking Americans for their views on abortion recently, we decided to follow up with questions about birth control pills and family planning.

    Specifically, should health insurance â€" both private policies and those bought with government assistance â€" cover the cost of oral contraceptives?

    When it comes to private insurance, including employer-based policies, 77 percent of people said it should cover all or some of the cost of oral contraceptives. The remainder said women should pay for the pill themselves.

    Now, what if someone is getting help from the government to buy private insurance? The results were about the same: 74 percent of people said the pill should be covered.

    In both cases, the support for coverage was strongest among the young and people with at least a college education.

    Separately, more than three-quarters of Americans support federal subsidies at clinics for low-income people to cover birth control and family planning â€" excluding abortions.

    Finally, we asked if people knew whether their insurance covered birth control pills. The most common answer at 43 percent was "don't know." Thirty-one percent of people said their plans cover the pill.

    Most insurance plans do cover the pill, and a majority of states have laws requiring insurance plans that cover prescription medicines to cover contraceptives.

    Dr. Raymond Fabius, chief medical officer at Thomson Reuters, noted to Shots, that people were even more supportive of government subsidies for family planning services and contraceptives for the poor than they were of private insurance plans covering the pill.

    The latest NPR-Thomson Reuters Health Poll drew responses in telephone interviews from more than 3,000 adults across the country. The margin for error is plus or minus 1.8 percentage points.

    You can find the full text of the questions and the responses here. Find the detailed results of past polls on Thomson-Reuters' site here, or click on the "NPR-Thomson Reuters Poll" tag below for a roundup.

    The Summer of Sequels

    I have seen this film before. Folks get all excited about the potential for vertical integration to save our healthcare system, and then the facts emerge.

    The results of the first major ACO demonstration project are in and unless there is some hidden meaning behind all the data, it looks like ACOs may not be the magic bullet that the Obama administration had hoped. The demonstration began under President Bush and the specific payment structure and quality incentive differ somewhat from the ACO rules under the Affordable Care Act, but the main features are the same â€" give an integrated provider organization a share of the savings if it can hold down Medicare spending while also offering some quality bonuses.

    Despite the fact that the participants included ten of the nation’s best known physician-led integrated organizations, less than half were able to lower Medicare costs by the final year of the project and only two demonstrated consistent cost savings. And the methods used to achieve savings â€" nurse call centers and telephone health checkups â€" are the sorts of thing that don’t exactly require vertical integration.

    There are going to be excuses â€" the ACOs need to be run by hospitals, they need more time to develop their information technologies, the performance incentives need to be strengthened. But that is the kind of ex post rationalizing one hears any time an experiment fails to support a theory. Maybe the theory (that vertical integration is the panacea for our ailing system) is wrong.

    There remains a deep divide in both academia and amongst practitioners about the merits of vertical integration. Supporters of the ACA will continue to pin their hopes for Medicare savings on ACOs, the new evidence be damned. I have blogged that we need less top down direction about how to organize care delivery and I am sorry in a way to see the data bear me out. (Sorry because I am fresh out of magic bullets.) If the government is to play a role in the future of the health system, then it should either go all in on regulation (i.e., single payer) or fix the problems that are limiting the effectiveness of the free market (e.g., subsidize and standardize integrated health information systems; double down on antitrust enforcement.) Will these ideas work? I don’t know. But at least there isn’t a strong theoretical case to be made that they will fail.

    Let’s stop this love affair with vertical integration. How many times do we have to keep seeing this bad movie?

    P.S. I am currently reading The Quantum Story which is about the evolution of quantum physics. I barely understand much of it. But this much I do understand. When physicists perform experiments and the results do not confirm their theory, they reject the theory.

    David Dranove, PhD, is the Walter McNerney Distinguished Professor of Health Industry Management at Northwestern University’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management, where he is also Professor of Management and Strategy and Director of the Health Enterprise Management Program. He has published over 80 research articles and book chapters and written five books, including “The Economic Evolution of American Healthcare and Code Red.”

    Filed Under: Op-Ed, THCB

    Tagged: ACOs, David Dranove, Vertical integration Jun 2, 2011

    What to Discuss With Your Doctor for Common Cold

    If you or your child or any member of your family gets infected with common cold, you may decide to consult your doctor/pediatrician/family doctor. As most doctors are busy and appointment with your doctor may be brief, it is wise to know and learn the topics you need to discuss with your doctor, regarding common cold anyone of your family member may be suffering. Prepare for your appointment with your doctor and know what questions to ask your doctor and what to expect from your doctor.

    You should be prepared for appointment before seeing your doctor. Write down the symptoms you or your child or any member of your family may have and for how long you may have the symptoms. Write down if there is any medical information or any medication being received for other medical ailment, about the patient of common cold worth mentioning to your doctor. Mention any recent exposure to people with similar symptoms. Finally write down what questions you might ask your doctor during appointment. You should also ask you doctor about the ways to prevent common cold.

    You may ask the following questions:

    • What is/are the causes of the symptoms?
    • How long it may take for symptomatic improvement?
    • What medications or foods to be avoided during treatment?
    • Is there any need for tests?
    • Am I contagious?
    • When it is safe to return to work or school?
    • Is there any home remedy or steps taken at home that will be helpful?

    Your doctor may ask following questions before writing treatment for you:

    • What are your symptoms and for how long they are present? Did all symptoms start at the same time?
    • Is there any change in the symptoms severity (improved or worsened)?
    • Do you have fever?
    • Did you closely interact with any individual recently with similar symptoms?
    • What medications/supplements you (patient) are taking at present?
    • Do you at present have any illness (acute or chronic)?

    You may be asked some other questions by your doctor based on different patient setting. Your doctor may ask different set of question to different patients with similar illness. Be prepared to answer the above mentioned questions accurately.

    Related posts:

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  • How to Prepare for Doctor’s Appointment for Ringworm?
  • Reduce Common Cold by Reducing Risk Factors
  • What is Common Cold?
  • Symptomatic Treatment of Common Cold
  • Symptoms of Common Cold
  • Prevention of Common Cold
  • Prepare yourself for Appointment with your Doctor for Nail Fungus Infection
  • Treatment of Common Cold
  • Global impact of Common Cold
  • MRSA Bug Found In Cows And Humans Can Evade Some Tests

    A colorized scanning electron micrograph showing clumps of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria in 2005.Enlarge Janice Carr; Jeff Hageman/CDC

    A colorized scanning electron micrograph showing clumps of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria in 2005.

    Janice Carr; Jeff Hageman/CDC

    A colorized scanning electron micrograph showing clumps of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria in 2005.

    European researchers have found a strain of drug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus that appears to have a novel way of defeating the antibiotic methicillin.

    Bugs that can beat that antibiotic are known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, and present real challenges for prevention and treatment.

    A report just published in the medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases describes the discovery of the new bug found in milk in England and in samples taken from people in Denmark and the U.K. Researchers came across the bacterium while investigating udder infections in Britain.

     

    The upshot is that this staph germ â€" which doesn't contain the standard genetic bit known as mecA that MRSA bugs use to thwart methicillin â€" may go undetected on genetic tests that are used to rapidly detect MRSA or to check on the old-fashioned and slower results that come when the bacteria are grown on agar plates. Instead, the germ has a variation on mecA that's different enough to slip by the regular MRSA gene tests.

    The paper's authors say they can't prove for sure that the bug is transmitted between cattle and people, but there is a fair amount of circumstantial evidence to support that jump.

    The Washington Post reports the researchers said their finding doesn't mean people could get sick from pasteurized milk. But the germ could be passed on through unpasteurized milk, one of the authors said at a media briefing.

    Big Pharma's Golden Age Leads To Generics Windfall

    Later this year, if all goes as expected, a generic version of Lipitor will become available in the U.S.Enlarge Mark Lennihan/AP

    Later this year, if all goes as expected, a generic version of Lipitor will become available in the U.S.

    Mark Lennihan/AP

    Later this year, if all goes as expected, a generic version of Lipitor will become available in the U.S.

    Chances are very good that the next prescription you fill will get you a generic medicine.

    Three-quarters of prescriptions these days are filled with a generic. And the proportion keeps climbing.

    Later this year, if all goes according to plan, the biggest generic switch in the history of the pharmaceutical industry will go down. Cholesterol-fighter Lipitor, the best-selling prescription medicine in the world, will lose U.S. patent protection, clearing the way for legal, inexpensive copies.

    The wave of generics to treat conditions ranging from depression to high blood pressure can save consumers plenty of dough.

     

    If your health insurance covers prescription drugs, you'll have a lower copay for a generic versus a brand-name drug. The exact savings would depend on the particulars of the plan, but could easily hit $20 or $30 a month.

    If you have to pay for your medicines yourself, some big-box retailers and drugstore chains sell generics for rock-bottom prices.

    Over the next couple of years lots of other big-selling brands will also go generic. Think Plavix, a blood thinner, and Actos, for diabetes, just to name two.

    Why are there so many generics all of a sudden? Well, the wave actually got rolling a few years ago. Now, though, some of the biggest brands are involved.

    The reason for all the action is that patents are expiring on medicines launched during the 1990s, which is looking more and more like a golden era of productivity for the pharmaceutical industry.

    Typically the patents for prescription pills last about a dozen years or so. And as the clock runs out, the generics makers rush in.

    How do American feel about generics? We asked more than 3,000 people last year in a survey conducted with Thomson Reuters. Eight-five of people said generics are as safe and effective as brand-name drugs. And 90 percent said they're willing to take a generic when one is available.

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