Adherence to cardiovascular medication: A review of systematic reviews

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Abstract

Background Use of cardiovascular medication has increased over time, especially for primary and secondary prevention, with polypharmacy common. Methods Review of published systematic reviews of the factors and outcomes associated with adherence to cardiovascular medication using MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL and PsycINFO databases. Quality was assessed using the AMSTAR tool. Results Of 789 systematic reviews identified, 45 met the inclusion criteria and passed the quality assessment; 34 focused on factors associated with adherence, and 11 on outcomes. High heterogeneity, both between and within reviews, precluded meta-analysis and so a pooled estimate of adherence levels could not be derived. Adherence was associated with disease factors, therapy factors, healthcare factors, patient factors and social factors, though with some inconsistencies. In total, 91% of reviews addressing outcomes reported that low adherence was associated with poorer clinical and economic endpoints. Conclusions Factors from across five key domains relate to non-adherence to cardiovascular medications, and may contribute to poorer clinical outcomes. Interventions to improve adherence should be developed to address modifiable factors and targeted at those at highest risk of nonadherence. Adherence research is highly heterogeneous to-date and efforts to standardize this should be implemented to improve comparability.

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APA

Leslie, K. H., McCowan, C., & Pell, J. P. (2019, March 1). Adherence to cardiovascular medication: A review of systematic reviews. Journal of Public Health (United Kingdom). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdy088

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