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Adherence to therapies is a primary determinant of
treatment success. Poor adherence attenuates optimum clinical
benefits and therefore reduces the overall effectiveness of health
systems.
Medicines will not work if you do not take them
Medicines will not be effective if patients do not follow prescribed
treatment, yet in developed countries only 50% of patients who
suffer from chronic diseases adhere to treatment recommendations. In
developing countries, when taken together with poor access to health
care, lack of appropriate diagnosis and limited access to medicines,
poor adherence is threatening to render futile any effort to tackle
chronic conditions, such as diabetes, depression and HIV/AIDS.
This report is based on an exhaustive review of the
published literature on the definitions, measurements, epidemiology,
economics and interventions applied to nine chronic conditions and
risk factors. These are asthma, cancer (palliative care),
depression, diabetes, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, tobacco
smoking and tuberculosis.
Intended for policy-makers, health managers, and
clinical practitioners, this report provides a concise summary of
the consequences of poor adherence for health and economics. It also
discusses the options available for improving adherence, and
demonstrates the potential impact on desired health outcomes and
health care budgets. It is hoped that this report will lead to new
thinking on policy development and action on adherence to long-term
therapies.
ADHERENCE TO LONG-TERM THERAPIES: EVIDENCE FOR ACTION
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Full Report (1.5KB)
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Contents and Introduction
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Section I (Chapters 1-3)
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Section II (Chapters 4-6)
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Section III (Chapters 7-15)
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Annexes |