Patient Preference and Adherence (Jul 2021)

Insights from Monitoring Aspirin Adherence: A Medication Adherence Cascade Tool

  • Wheat HL,
  • Irani E,
  • Hughes J,
  • Josephson R,
  • Dolansky MA

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 15
pp. 1639 – 1646

Abstract

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Heather L Wheat, 1 Elliane Irani, 2 Joel Hughes, 3 Richard Josephson, 4, 5 Mary A Dolansky 2 1Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA; 2Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA; 3Department of Psychological Sciences, Kent State University, Kent, OH, USA; 4School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA; 5Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Case Western Reserve University, Harrington Heart & Vascular Institute, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USACorrespondence: Heather L WheatDepartment of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, 11100 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH, 44106, USATel +1 216 844-8447Email [email protected]: Adherence to recommended medications is a key issue in the care of patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and barriers to adherence are well established during the medication adherence cascade, the processes of prescribing, obtaining, taking, and maintaining medication use. Aspirin avoids many of the barriers in the medication adherence cascade as it does not require a prescription (prescribing) and is inexpensive, easily accessible (obtaining), prescribed once-daily (taking) as an over-the-counter medication and is generally perceived by patients as safe (maintaining). The purpose of this paper is to report aspirin adherence and propose the Medication Adherence Cascade Tool to assist clinicians to consider all aspects of medication adherence.Methods: Adherence to aspirin was monitored with an electronic pillbox. Frequency analysis, independent T-tests, and ANOVA were completed on 151 patients with underlying heart failure who were prescribed aspirin within a larger parent study. Chi-square tests were completed to assess differences in baseline demographic characteristics.Findings: Mean aspirin adherence was 82.2% overall, with 11.9% of sample with adherence 50%, 18.5% with adherence 50– 80%, and 69.5% with adherence ≥ 80%. Greater adherence was observed in self-identified White as compared to Black patients (84.47% vs 73.53%; p = 0.014), and patients ≥ 70 years of age compared to < 70 years (87.00% vs 77.49%; p = 0.009).Interpretation: Aspirin adherence was suboptimal despite the fact that it addresses most of the barriers on the medication adherence cascade (ie, relatively easy access, low cost, and low risk). A Medication Adherence Cascade Tool (MACT) is proposed as a clinical guide to facilitate patient–provider co-production of strategies to address medication adherence. The tool can assist patients and providers to co-produce adherence to achieve optimal medication benefits.Keywords: medication adherence, aspirin, cardiovascular disease

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