Sign up for our complimentary
weekly e-journal

Main Newsletter
Mastery Series
Therapy Series
 
Bookmark and Share | Print Article | Items for the Week Previous | All Articles This Week | Next
This article originally posted 10 October, 2006 and appeared in  Issue 333

Are Your Diabetic Patients Part of the 21% Who do Not Take Their Meds?

About 21 percent of individuals with diabetes do not regularly take their blood-sugar lowering, blood-pressure lowering or cholesterol-lowering pills, researchers found in study of 11,532 diabetes patients.
Advertisement
The study patients who were nonadherent to treatment had higher blood pressure, higher levels of artery-clogging LDL cholesterol and higher blood sugar levels, indicating poor diabetes control.

Importantly, Dr. P. Michael Ho of the Denver VA Medical Center and colleagues report, patients who did not adhere to their medications had a 58-percent higher odds of being hospitalized and an 81-percent higher odds of dying than those who took their medications as prescribed. This was true even after the researchers accounted for factors that may also have contributed to these outcomes.

"Incremental increases in medication adherence were associated with improved outcomes," Ho and colleagues report in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

"The lower risk of being hospitalized or dying among patients who took their medications is likely due to the benefit of the medications as well as the fact that patients who take their medications on a regular basis are likely to practice other healthy behaviors that lead to their lower risk."

This study, Ho said, highlights just how important it is for diabetic patients to take their medications as directed. "It may be helpful to incorporate medication taking into the daily routine," Ho said.

Patients who have trouble taking their mediations on a regular basis, should discuss this with their physician "so that together the patient and physician can address the problem." Patients who were nonadherent were younger than adherent patients and had fewer other illnesses.

Publishers Note: This is where pharmacists can play a role as part of the diabetes team: doctors, nurses and other medical professionals should be checking with the patient’s pharmacy as to whether or not the patient is filling their medications in a timely manner.

Archives of Internal Medicine, October 2006.

================================

Advertisement
At Advantage/OMC it is our mission to make your job easier by providing your patients with services and products of the highest quality.

We are a full service mail order pharmacy that can offer your patients a full line of prescription medications, blood glucose monitors and supplies, insulin pumps and supplies, as well as impotence devices. The Advantage/OMC alliance provides Major Medical Insurances through Advantage while OMC deals with Medicare Insurance.
http://www.diabetesincontrol.com/ads/omc/dest.php

Advertisement


 

Bookmark and Share | Print | Category | Home

This article originally posted 10 October, 2006 and appeared in  Issue 333

Past five issues: Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 69 | Issue 611 | Issue 610 | Diabetes Clinical Mastery Series Issue 68 | Issue 609 |

 
Diabetes In Control Advertisers
 
 
Cast Your Vote
Do your type 2 patients not on insulin count their carbs and report back to you?

Navigate Diabetes In Control



Search Articles On Diabetes In Control