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Heart 2003;89(Supplement 2 ):19; doi:10.1136/heart.89.suppl_2.ii19
Copyright © 2003 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Cardiovascular Society
Heart 2003;89:ii19
© 2003 by BMJ Publishing Group & British Cardiac Society

Medicine partnerships

J Cramer

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Ms Joyce Cramer, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA;
joyce.cramer{at}yale.edu

Partial medication compliance, where patients do not take enough of their prescribed medicine to achieve adequate outcomes, is common. Research using electronic monitoring to assess compliance has shown that people take approximately 75% of doses as prescribed, irrespective of the condition being treated or its severity. Erratic compliance often leads to discontinuation of therapy, as treatment is perceived to be ineffective. Compliance decreases as frequency of dosing increases. Inadequate compliance and treatment persistence results in poor outcomes, despite the best efforts of the medical team. It is important to develop and implement a strategy to improve compliance. Simple steps that can be taken include helping patients to select "cues" to remind them to take their tablets, use of dose reminder boxes, and visual feedback of compliance data from electronic monitors.

Keywords: patient compliance; medication


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