AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous systematic reviews have not consistently identified successful medication adherence interventions for people with Type 2 diabetes (PwT2D), partly due to inconsistent reporting of these interventions.
  • The study aimed to pinpoint effective behavior change techniques (BCTs) and features of successful adherence interventions through a comprehensive systematic search of various medical databases that included randomized controlled trials.
  • Findings showed that successful interventions often engaged pharmacists, focused solely on adherence, and utilized specific BCTs such as "credible source" and "social support," while emphasizing the importance of clear intervention context and tailored strategies for enhancing medication adherence.

Article Abstract

Background: Although previous systematic reviews have studied medication adherence interventions among people with Type 2 diabetes (PwT2D), no intervention has been found to improve medication adherence consistently. Furthermore, inconsistent and poor reporting of intervention description has made understanding, replication, and evaluation of intervention challenging.

Purpose: We aimed to identify the behavior change techniques (BCTs) and characteristics of successful medication adherence interventions among PwT2D.

Methods: A systematic search was conducted on Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Web of Science, and Scopus. Studies were included if they were randomized controlled trials with BCT-codable interventions designed to influence adherence to anti-diabetic medication for PwT2D aged 18 years old and above and have medication adherence measure as an outcome.

Results: Fifty-five studies were included. Successful interventions tend to target medication adherence only, involve pharmacists as the interventionist, contain "Credible source" (BCT 9.1), "Instruction on how to perform the behaviour" (BCT 4.1), "Social support (practical)" (BCT 3.2), "Action planning" (BCT 1.4), and/ or "Information about health consequences" (BCT 5.1). Very few interventions described its context, used theory, examined adherence outcomes during the follow-up period after an intervention has ended, or were tailored to address specific barriers of medication adherence.

Conclusion: We identified specific BCTs and characteristics that are commonly reported in successful medication adherence interventions, which can facilitate the development of future interventions. Our review highlighted the need to consider and clearly describe different dimensions of context, theory, fidelity, and tailoring in an intervention.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10928844PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaae001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

medication adherence
28
adherence interventions
12
medication
9
adherence
9
behavior change
8
change techniques
8
people type
8
type diabetes
8
bcts characteristics
8
successful medication
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!