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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Mar 27, 2020
Date Accepted: Oct 30, 2020

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Effect of Interactive eHealth Interventions on Improving Medication Adherence in Adults With Long-Term Medication: Systematic Review

Pouls BPH, Vriezekolk JE, Bekker CL, Linn AJ, van Onzenoort HAW, Vervloet M, van Dulmen S, van den Bemt BJF

Effect of Interactive eHealth Interventions on Improving Medication Adherence in Adults With Long-Term Medication: Systematic Review

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(1):e18901

DOI: 10.2196/18901

PMID: 33416501

PMCID: 7822716

Effect of interactive e-Health interventions on improving medication adherence in adults with long-term medication: a systematic review

  • Bart Pieter Hendrik Pouls; 
  • Johanna E Vriezekolk; 
  • Charlotte Linde Bekker; 
  • Annemiek J Linn; 
  • Hein A W van Onzenoort; 
  • Marcia Vervloet; 
  • Sandra van Dulmen; 
  • Bart J F van den Bemt

ABSTRACT

Background:

Medication nonadherence leads to suboptimal treatment outcomes making it a major priority in healthcare. e-Health provides an opportunity to offer medication adherence interventions with minimal effort from healthcare providers whose time and resources are limited

Objective:

The aim of this systematic review is twofold: 1) to evaluate effectiveness of recently developed and tested e-Health interventions on medication adherence in adult patients using long-term medication, 2) to describe strategies among effective interventions.

Methods:

MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, PsycINFO and Web of Science were systematically searched from January 2014 to July 2019 as well as reference lists and citations of the identified articles. Eligible studies fulfilled the following inclusion criteria: (1) randomised controlled trial with a usual care control group; (2) applying an interactive e-Health intervention aimed at the patient or patient’s caregiver; (3) medication adherence as primary outcome irrespective of follow-up period; (4) with a total sample of at least 50 adult patients using long-term medication. Methodologic quality was assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. Selection and quality assessment of studies was performed by two researchers independently. A best-evidence synthesis was performed.

Results:

Of the 9,046 records screened, 23 randomised clinical trials were included reporting on 29 interventions. A majority, 17 out of 29 interactive interventions, had a significant positive effect on medication adherence. Our best evidence synthesis provided strong evidence for a positive effect of interventions using SMS and/or interactive voice response, mobile applications and calls as mode of providing adherence feedback. Intervention strategies to teach medication management skills, to improve health care quality by coordinating medication adherence care between professionals and to facilitate communication and/or decision making between patients and healthcare providers also showed strong evidence for a positive effect.

Conclusions:

Overall, this review supports the hypothesis that interactive e-Health interventions can be effective in improving medication adherence. Interventions that support behaviour change by improving patient’s treatment involvement and medication management skills are most promising and should be considered for implementation in practice.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Pouls BPH, Vriezekolk JE, Bekker CL, Linn AJ, van Onzenoort HAW, Vervloet M, van Dulmen S, van den Bemt BJF

Effect of Interactive eHealth Interventions on Improving Medication Adherence in Adults With Long-Term Medication: Systematic Review

J Med Internet Res 2021;23(1):e18901

DOI: 10.2196/18901

PMID: 33416501

PMCID: 7822716

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