TY - JOUR AU - Thakkar J. AU - Chow Clara AB -

Despite overwhelming evidence of the effectiveness of secondary prevention therapies, surveys indicate poor adherence to medical treatments and lifestyle recommendations after an acute coronary syndrome. The term adherence is preferred over compliance, as the former suggests a therapeutic alliance, whereas the latter reflects passive patient obedience. Poor adherence results from a complex interplay of multiple factors at patient, practitioner and system levels. Poor adherence among patients with stable coronary artery disease is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular admissions (10%-40%), coronary interventions (10%-30%) and cardiovascular mortality (50%-80%). Improving adherence is a complex process. A range of interventions that target modifiable factors influencing adherence have been explored, but there are no guidelines to guide the choice, and multidisciplinary efforts may be needed. Future research in the area should focus on comparative efficacy of interventions to enhance adherence.

AD - Department of Cardiology, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia. drjaythakkar@yahoo.com.au.
Cardiac Program, The George Institute for Global Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia. AN - 25390496 BT - Medical Journal of Australia DP - NLM ET - 2014/11/13 LA - eng LB - MSK M1 - 10 N1 - Thakkar, Jay B
Chow, Clara K
Australia
Med J Aust. 2014 Nov 17;201(10):S106-9. N2 -

Despite overwhelming evidence of the effectiveness of secondary prevention therapies, surveys indicate poor adherence to medical treatments and lifestyle recommendations after an acute coronary syndrome. The term adherence is preferred over compliance, as the former suggests a therapeutic alliance, whereas the latter reflects passive patient obedience. Poor adherence results from a complex interplay of multiple factors at patient, practitioner and system levels. Poor adherence among patients with stable coronary artery disease is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular admissions (10%-40%), coronary interventions (10%-30%) and cardiovascular mortality (50%-80%). Improving adherence is a complex process. A range of interventions that target modifiable factors influencing adherence have been explored, but there are no guidelines to guide the choice, and multidisciplinary efforts may be needed. Future research in the area should focus on comparative efficacy of interventions to enhance adherence.

PY - 2014 SN - 1326-5377 (Electronic)
0025-729X (Linking) SP - S106 EP - 9 T2 - Medical Journal of Australia TI - Adherence to secondary prevention therapies in acute coronary syndrome VL - 201 ER -