Renal pharmacists' perceptions and current practices of assessing medication adherence in dialysis patients
Background: Medication nonadherence is a major problem in chronic kidney failure patients undergoing dialysis. Pharmacists play a vital role in improving medication-related patient outcomes, reducing drug-related problems, and improving medication adherence. However, little is known about how pharmacists assess medication adherence in dialysis patients.
Objective: To measure pharmacists’ perceptions, current practices, and barriers to assessing adherence in dialysis patients. Setting Australian renal-specialised pharmacists.
Method: An online survey was conducted between March and May 2016. Survey included five psychometric scales measuring perceived prevalence, contributors, effective methods, barriers, and confidence to assess adherence on a 10-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree; 10 = strongly agree). Current practices were identified using a 4-point graded response (1 = do not practice; 4 = practice for all). Main outcome measure: Perception scores, scale reliability, and responses to current practices questionnaire.
Results: 41 pharmacists completed the survey (response rate, 91.1%). The majority (91.9%, n = 34; median = 8.0) agreed patients were nonadherent to medication. Time constraints (43.8%, n = 14) and hospital support (31.3%, n = 10) were perceived as barriers to assessment.
Objective: blood monitoring was frequently used to determine nonadherence (57.1%, n = 16), whereas subjective interviews were rarely conducted (27.6%, n = 8). Though all pharmacists support the presence of dedicated pharmacist for assessing adherence (100.0%, n = 33), only 24.2% were actually performing this function.
Conclusion: Pharmacists were rarely assigned for adherence assessment in dialysis settings. Established self-report methods were under-utilised compared to objective methods. Future research should investigate the effectiveness of pharmacists’ involvement in facilitating adherence promotion and early identification of medication-related issues in dialysis patients.
History
Publication title
International journal of clinical pharmacyVolume
40Pagination
26-35ISSN
2210-7703Department/School
School of Pharmacy and PharmacologyPublisher
SpringerPlace of publication
NetherlandsRights statement
Copyright 2017 Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer NatureRepository Status
- Restricted