PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Medication education key to successful adherence in patients with diabetes

2011-02-09
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of California, San Diego say that medication education is a key factor in helping patients with diabetes better stick to their drug treatments plans. The study, currently on line in the February issue of the journal Annals of Pharmacotherapy, points to the need for pharmacists and other health care providers to assess reasons why some patients don't adhere to their medication plans, and to provide counseling opportunities to help them.

"Counseling can be more effective if pharmacists recognize that individual patients are each motivated to adhere to their drug regimens in different ways," said Candis M. Morello, PharmD, associate professor of clinical pharmacy at UCSD's Skaggs School of Pharmacy. "By understanding these differences, and knowing what actually works for individual patients, pharmacists can provide a very important service."

Diabetes is a complex disorder, typically requiring multiple medications to achieve control of the patient's blood sugar levels. Medication adherence –taking medications as instructed at the right time of day, frequency and dosage – is a significant factor for a patient's successful management of their disease. Therefore, knowing which methods diabetes patients and caregivers report help for improving adherence can provides valuable knowledge to make counseling opportunities more effective.

Morello and colleagues surveyed more than 1200 individuals over age 18, most of whom (about 75%) had type 2 diabetes. Nearly half of this number took only oral medications, and the vast majority (86.8%) of the patients with diabetes reported taking medications two or more times per day.

Their goal was to determine methods that patients and their caregivers have used to improve medication adherence, assess the perceived helpfulness of such methods and identify motivating factors or medication characteristics that might help patients stick to their regimen.

Taking medications as part of a daily routine and utilizing pill boxes were the most frequently reported helpful methods to improve adherence. The three most motivating factors that patients identified were their knowledge that diabetes medications work effectively to lower blood glucose, understanding how they could manage side effects of their medications and a better understanding of the drugs' benefits.

Conversely, non-adherence involved not only a patient's forgetfulness, but also such factors as inability to afford a prescription or adverse reactions to a drug such as weight gain or nausea. As a result, health care providers might deem such regimens unsuccessful and prescribe even more or different drugs.

"To empower patients to overcome medication adherence barriers, we conclude that pharmacists are well-positioned to provide more proactive and thorough counseling sessions to include education of how diabetes drugs work and why they are so important," said Morello. She added that while seemingly simple tools such as using a 7-day pill box may improve a patient's adherence, improvement is often very patient-specific.

"Pharmacists should incorporate an assessment of individual variances into their counseling sessions…and patients should know that their pharmacist is an excellent resource for medication education and advice."

###


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A paperweight for platinum

A paperweight for platinum
2011-02-09
RICHLAND, Wash. -- A new combination of nanoparticles and graphene results in a more durable catalytic material for fuel cells, according to work published today online at the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The catalytic material is not only hardier but more chemically active as well. The researchers are confident the results will help improve fuel cell design. "Fuel cells are an important area of energy technology, but cost and durability are big challenges," said chemist Jun Liu. "The unique structure of this material provides much needed stability, good ...

Understanding patterns of seafloor biomass

Understanding patterns of seafloor biomass
2011-02-09
Analysis of a comprehensive database has revealed strong links between biological productivity in the surface oceans and patterns of biomass and abundance at the seafloor, helping to explain large regional differences. The research was conducted by an international, multi-institutional research team including scientists from the National Oceanography Centre (NOC), and incorporated data from the Census of Marine Life (CoML). The vast majority of the biological production in the world's oceans occurs within sunlit surface waters – the so-called photic zone. Through the ...

Cross-border conservation vital to protect birds in a climate-change world

Cross-border conservation vital to protect birds in a climate-change world
2011-02-09
Countries need to increase co-operation over conservation to protect birds and other wildlife in an era of climate change, according to a new continental-scale study. Experts have established a new conservation index to help policy-makers to deal with the effects of climate change on birds in Africa, and it could assist governments across the world to protect wildlife areas and help species as climate change forces them to move to new areas. It is the first categorisation of protected areas to show how conservationists might deal with climate change and the shuffling ...

Virtual laboratory predicts train vibrations

Virtual laboratory predicts train vibrations
2011-02-09
The construction of new rail lines, or the relocation of old ones underground, has increased society's interest over recent years in the vibrations produced by trains, especially among people who live or work near the tracks. Now a study headed by the Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV) has made it possible to estimate the trajectory of vibrations from the point at which they are generated (wheel-rail contact) through to the ground. "The model acts as a "virtual train laboratory', meaning that, if the parameters of the train or the track ballast are changed, it is ...

Experts call for greater awareness of the links between diabetes and kidney disease

2011-02-09
The first time that many patients realise that diabetes can affect their kidneys is when they are referred to renal services, according to a multi-cultural study in the March issue of the Journal of Renal Care. UK researchers who spoke to 48 patients with diabetes attending specialist renal services in Leicester, Luton and Ealing, discovered that awareness of the kidney risks posed by the disease was very low. "The people we spoke to experienced feelings of surprise, fear and regret when they found out their kidney had been affected" says Professor Gurch Randhawa, ...

Extra testosterone reduces your empathy

2011-02-09
A new study from Utrecht and Cambridge Universities has for the first time found that an administration of testosterone under the tongue in volunteers negatively affects a person's ability to 'mind read', an indication of empathy. The findings are published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. In addition, the effects of testosterone administration are predicted by a fetal marker of prenatal testosterone, the 2D:4D ratio. The study has important implications for the androgen theory of autism (testosterone is an androgen) and confirms ...

Drug-eluting stents are preferred therapy for revascularization of chronic total occlusions

2011-02-09
A systematic review of medical evidence has determined drug-eluting stents (DES) outperform bare metal stents (BMS) for revascularization of chronic total occlusions. Researchers found coated stents reduce restenosis and target revascularization, offering a safe approach with similar adverse events as BMS. Full findings are available in the February issue of Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions. Medical evidence maintains that chronic total occlusions ...

Ancient teeth raise new questions about the origins of modern man

Ancient teeth raise new questions about the origins of modern man
2011-02-09
BINGHAMTON, NY – Eight small teeth found in a cave near Rosh Haain, central Israel, are raising big questions about the earliest existence of humans and where we may have originated, says Binghamton University anthropologist Rolf Quam. Part of a team of international researchers led by Dr. Israel Hershovitz of Tel Aviv University, Qaum and his colleagues have been examining the dental discovery and recently published their joint findings in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Excavated at Qesem cave, a pre-historic site that was uncovered in 2000, the size ...

Researchers identify the genotype of disorders causing cardiac sudden death syndrome

2011-02-09
This release is available in Spanish. Researchers from the Hospital Virgen de las Nieves of the University of Granada have identified the most frequent mutations in the gene KCNH2 in patients with long QT syndrome. Long Qt syndrome is a disorder of cardiac ionic channels that approximately affects one in every 2,500 people and may cause torsade de pointes episodes, which can trigger sudden death. This condition usually affects children and adolescents, and it is occasionally mistaken for convulsions, leading to a misdiagnosis of epilepsy. So far, hundreds of mutations ...

Blinds4Home Introduces its Website for Your Window Blinds Needs

2011-02-09
Blinds4Home opens its doors to people who wish to purchase window blinds for their windows. There is a need for this fixture as you require privacy, if not protection against the glaring sun or the need to preserve the heat during the coldest of winter. Window blinds, vertical blinds, window shades, roller shades and solar shades are made affordable for you to suit your needs. These also come with safety devices to protect your children and your pets. This store offers different varieties of window treatments that meet your requirements. Their lines of products furnish ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Durham University scientists pioneer new drone swarm technology

New research reveals insights into linkage between menopause and cardiovascular health

Durham University scientists map stress response system in plants

Weight-loss drug semaglutide reduces cocaine use in rats: Suggests possible first pharmacological treatment for human cocaine dependency

Are probiotics worth the cost to prevent infection after a colon removal surgery?

Mizzou at the forefront of using hydrogen energy safely

New design framework makes it easier to create custom shock-absorbing materials

Ochsner Health honored by AMA for Joy in Medicine

New meta-analysis demonstrates that access to the GeneSight test can significantly improve response and remission rates for patients with depression

UCLA receives $7.1M federal grant to expand psychotherapy treatment for chronic pain

One dose of antibiotic treats early syphilis as well as three doses

Researchers identify single antibody behind life-threatening reaction to common blood thinner

Don’t sweat it: New device detects sweat biomarker at minimal perspiration rate

Not so sweet: Some sugar substitutes linked to faster cognitive decline

Antibody-making cells reveal new function in response to flu infection

CCNY physicists make quantum emitter discovery in diamonds

SwRI and Copeland win R&D 100 Award for innovative oil-free compressor

Loneliness is bad for health and wealth in the U.K.

Oral health treatment in patients due for surgery is associated with significantly lower rates of postoperative pneumonia and shorter hospital stays, per observational study in one Japanese hospital,

Oxygen came late to ocean depths during Paleozoic

Among women suffering hyperemesis (extreme nausea and vomiting) in pregnancy, half report considering terminating their pregnancy, and 9 in 10 have considered having no more children

Loneliness is bad for health and wealth in the UK

Climate change is making rollercoaster harvests the new normal

Misdirected: Increased dementia risk associated with errors of the 'brain’s compass'

Sip smarter: Apple juice effects on oral health are short-lived, study suggests

Vegan dog food provides similar nutrients to meat-based diets, new study finds

The cling of doom: How staph bacteria latch onto human skin

Emotional and medical toll of extreme pregnancy nausea, with many women considering ending pregnancies

DNA analysis shows colorectal cancer has unique microbial fingerprint

Sugar-coated nanoparticles could target deadly breast cancer

[Press-News.org] Medication education key to successful adherence in patients with diabetes