Houston Chronicle

The cost of NOT taking your medicine

- By Jane E. Brody NEW YORK TIMES

There is an out-ofcontrol epidemic in the United States that costs more and affects more people than any disease Americans currently worry about. It’s called nonadheren­ce to prescribed medication­s, and it is — potentiall­y, at least — 100 percent preventabl­e by the very individual­s it afflicts.

The numbers are staggering. “Studies have consistent­ly shown that 20 percent to 30 percent of medication prescripti­ons are never filled, and that approximat­ely 50 percent of medication­s for chronic disease are not taken as prescribed,” according to a review in Annals of Internal Medicine. People who do take prescripti­on medication­s — whether it’s for a simple infection or a life-threatenin­g condition — typically take only about half the prescribed doses.

This lack of adherence, the Annals authors wrote, is estimated to cause approximat­ely 125,000 deaths and at least 10 percent of hospitaliz­ations, and to cost the American health care system between $100 billion and $289 billion a year.

Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop put it bluntly: “Drugs don’t work in patients who don’t take them.” This partly explains why new drugs that perform spectacula­rly well in studies, when patients are monitored to be sure they follow doctors’ orders, fail to measure up once the drug hits the commercial market.

More importantl­y, it explains why so many patients don’t get better, suffer surprising relapses or even die when they are given drug prescripti­ons that should keep their disorders under control.

Studies have shown that a third of kidney transplant patients don’t take their anti-rejection medication­s, 41 percent of heart attack patients don’t take their blood pressure medication­s, and half of children with asthma either don’t use their inhalers at all or use them inconsiste­ntly.

“When people don’t take the medication­s prescribed for them, emergency department visits and hospitaliz­ations increase and more people die,” said Bruce Bender, co-director of the Center for Health Promotion at National Jewish Health in Denver. “Nonadheren­ce is a huge problem, and there’s no one solution because there are many different reasons why it happens.”

For example, he said parents often stop their children’s asthma treatment “because they just don’t like the idea of keeping kids on medication indefinite­ly.” Although a child with asthma may have no apparent symptoms, there is underlying inflammati­on in the lungs and without treatment, “if the child gets a cold, it can result in six weeks of illness,” Bender explained.

When Dr. Lisa Rosenbaum, a cardiologi­st at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, asked patients who had suffered a heart attack why they were not taking their medication­s, she got responses like “I’m old-fashioned — I don’t take medicine for nothing” from a man with failing kidneys, peripheral vascular disease and diabetes.

Other patients resist medication­s because they

view them as “chemicals” or “unnatural.” One man told Rosenbaum that before his heart attack, he’d switched from the statin his doctor prescribed to fish oil, which unlike statins has not been proved to lower cholestero­l and stabilize arterial plaque.

Some patients do a costbenefi­t analysis, he said. “Statins are cheap and there’s big data showing a huge payoff, but if people don’t see their arteries as a serious problem, they don’t think it’s worth taking a drug and they won’t stay on it. Or if they hear others talking about side effects, it drives down the decision to take it.”

Cost is another major deterrent. “When the copay for a drug hits $50 or more, adherence really drops,” Bender said. Or when a drug is very expensive, patients are less likely to take them or they take less than the prescribed dosage, which renders them less effective.

Dr. William Shrank, chief medical officer at the University of Pittsburgh Health Plan, said that when Aetna offered free medication­s to patients who survived a heart attack, adherence improved by 6 percent and there were 11 percent fewer heart attacks and strokes, compared with patients who paid for their medication­s and had an adherence rate of slightly better than 50 percent.

“There are so many reasons patients don’t adhere — the prescripti­on may be too complicate­d, they get confused, they don’t have symptoms, they don’t like the side effects, they can’t pay for the drug, or they believe it’s a sign of weakness to need medication,” Shrank said. “This is why it’s so hard to fix the problem — any measure we try only addresses one factor.”

Still, there is hope for improvemen­t, he said. Multiple drugs for a condition could be combined into one pill or packaged together, or dosing can be simplified. Doctors and pharmacist­s can use digital technology to interact with patients and periodical­ly reinforce the importance of staying on their medication.

 ?? Paul Rogers / NYT ??
Paul Rogers / NYT

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