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Impact of Clinical Pharmacist Mediated Discharge Counseling and SMS Reminders Service on Medication Adherence in Chronic Disorders
Author(s) -
Y. Samhitha Reddy,
Krishna Reddy
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of pharmaceutical research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2456-9119
DOI - 10.9734/jpri/2021/v33i59b34402
Subject(s) - medicine , pill , randomized controlled trial , pharmacist , medical prescription , referral , physical therapy , short message service , medication adherence , informed consent , pharmacy , family medicine , alternative medicine , nursing , computer science , operating system , pathology
Aims: This study aimed to assess the effect of discharge counseling with SMS reminders on medication adherence in chronic disorders.
Study Design: Prospective randomized open-label trial
Place and Duration of Study: The study was conducted at the dispensing department of a secondary care referral charity hospital located in a small village. The study was conducted for a period of six months from October 2018 to April 2019.
Methodology: Upon consent, a total of 364 patients were enrolled in this study and randomized into two groups viz., intervention group (n=182) and control group (n=182) respectively, with and without discharge counseling and SMS reminder on medication usage by the clinical pharmacist. The level of medication adherence was measured using a pill count and visual analog scale (VAS) methods at two follow-up visits includes baseline and final follow-up visit (gap of two months). A two-sample Wilcoxon rank‑sum (Mann–Whitney) was used to compare the statistical mean difference of medication adherence levels between two groups at each follow‑up visit.
Results: The mean age of intervention and control groups were 57.1±8.55 and 58.5±8.53; most of the subjects were >60 years of age and were typically suffering from hypertension (30.2%) and diabetes (34.8%). Initially, at baseline, the values of medication adherence level (pill-count method) were closer in both intervention (82.4±7.3) and control group (81.35±6.4), whereas at follow up visits, the levels of the intervention group (93.2±6.0, 95.6±2.25) were significantly increased (p<0.0001) as compared to the control group (81.2±8.5, 80.6±8.1).
Conclusion: Thus, the statistical significance infers that the clinical pharmacist-mediated discharge counseling with SMS reminders would increase medication adherence levels in chronic disorders.