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Purpose/Aims: The purpose of this project was to evaluate how patient education can improve medication adherence.
Background and Significance: An exhaustive literature search was conducted with critical appraisal and evidence synthesis to evaluate the effectiveness of patient education on medication adherence. The search concluded that adherence is crucial to chronic disease processes. However, there was no one intervention that emerged as being superior for improving medication
adherence. Working with patients individually to address needs through a variety of methods appeared was the best way to improve medication non-adherence.
Methods: A project to improve medication adherence in an outpatient mental health clinic incorporated electronic medical record (EMR) technology with patient education materials. The project evaluated provider satisfaction with the EMR handout system and evaluated providers’ perceptions of improved medication adherence. Providers (n=9) were followed for eight weeks once system was live. Appraisal was conducted on the providers and pre-test, mid project test, and an eight week post-test were administered. The instrument used was the Technology Acceptance Model-2 (TAM-2).
Outcomes: Friedman Test was conducted. Results obtained showed no significant difference between the three tests (χ2 (2) =2.889, p>0.05). The pretest had a standard deviation of 14.24. The posttest standard deviation was 23.75.
Conclusion: Providers educate patients about a variety of topics such as chronic conditions and wellness. It is beneficial to focus on education more broadly, instead of only medication adherence.
Keywords: patient education, medication adherence, physician perceptions
- Schulte, Barbara (Author)
- 2016-04-26 09:43:15
- 2021-06-20 11:55:04
- 3 years 4 months ago