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Cited 4 time in webofscience Cited 6 time in scopus
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Improvement in Medication Adherence after Pharmacist Intervention Is Associated with Favorable Clinical Outcomes in Patients with Ulcerative Colitisopen access

Authors
Kim, Jae SongGeum, Min JungSon, Eun SunYu, Yun MiCheon, Jae HeeKwon, Kyeng Hee
Issue Date
Sep-2022
Publisher
거트앤리버 소화기연관학회협의회
Keywords
Counseling; Medication adherence; Pharmacists; Recurrence; Ulcerative colitis
Citation
Gut and Liver, v.16, no.5, pp 736 - 745
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
Gut and Liver
Volume
16
Number
5
Start Page
736
End Page
745
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/2606
DOI
10.5009/gnl210371
ISSN
1976-2283
2005-1212
Abstract
Background/Aims: Although pharmacist intervention for patients with chronic diseases has been shown to improve medication adherence, few studies have evaluated its effects on the objective clinical outcomes. We investigated the impact of pharmacist intervention on medication adherence and clinical outcomes in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). Methods: Patients with UC and low medication adherence were divided into two groups, based on pharmacist intervention. Their medication possession ratio and nonadherence rate for 6 months before and after the baseline were investigated. The partial Mayo score, flare-up incidence, and factors influencing flare-up events for 1 year after the baseline were analyzed. Results: Of 99 patients, 33 and 66 were included in the intervention and control groups, respectively. The nonadherence rate significantly declined in the intervention group 6 months after the baseline (60.6% before vs 30.3% after; p=0.013). The groups showed a significant difference regarding time-related partial Mayo scores (p=0.002). Intervention was significantly negatively correlated with time and the partial Mayo score (r2=0.035, p=0.013). A significant difference was observed in the flare-up incidence (33.3% in the intervention group vs 54.6% in the control group; p=0.046). Multivariate logistic regression indicated that pharmacist intervention (adjusted odds ratio, 0.370; 95% confidence interval, 0.145 to 0.945; p=0.038) independently reduced the flareup risk. Conclusions: Pharmacist intervention significantly decreased the nonadherence rate, improved the partial Mayo score, and reduced the flare-up incidence compared with the control group in a cohort of UC patients identified to have low medication adherence. (Gut Liver, Published online February 11, 2022)
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