Adults who received renal transplants greatly improved their adherence to medication when they were sent computer reports that showed them when and how often they took their daily medications.
For the first time, researchers used a continuous self-improvement intervention approach that involved providing transplant recipients with monthly feedback, including reports on their adherence.
This program also included two methods of nurse support: a clinical nurse specialist worked with transplant patients to identify ways to improve the patient's compliance; a clinical nurse specialist practiced attentive listening and support to the patient.
After 1 month, the mean medication adherence score for the continuous self-improvement intervention group was significantly higher than the attention-control group's mean medication adherence score (P = .03).
Medication adherence remained fairly stable in the continuous self-improvement group, even at the six-month mark.
To read more go to: Computerised Pill-Taking Reports

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