Discrepancy Among Self-Reported Adherence, Prescription Refills, and Actual Anticoagulant Control

This study used self-reported medication taken and prescription refills to (a) verify warfarin medication adherence and (b) assist clinicians to determine the discrepancy between medication adherence and anticoagulant control efficacy. Methods This study was conducted at a national-university-affiliated hospital in Yilan County, Taiwan. Structured questionnaires and medical record reviews were adopted. A 100-point visual analog scale was used to measure the reported adherence of participants, whereas medication refill adherence was compared against self-reported adherence. Finally, degree of adherence was evaluated based on time in therapeutic range. Results This study included 192 participants. Half (n = 94, 49%) were women, and the mean age was 69.6 years. Mean scores were 92.2% for the visual analog scale and 87.3% for medication refill adherence. Medication adherence correlated significantly with age, as reflected in the visual analog scale scores (p
Source: Journal of Nursing Research - Category: Nursing Tags: ORIGINAL ARTICLES Source Type: research