CVS Caremark Undertakes Multi-Year Study to Improve Patient Medication Adherence
October 14 2009 - 8:30AM
PR Newswire (US)
Improved Adherence Could Positively Impact Patient Health and Save
Consumers and Health Plans Billions WOONSOCKET, R.I., Oct. 14
/PRNewswire/ -- CVS Caremark (NYSE:CVS) is sponsoring research to
investigate patient adherence to prescription drug therapies and
identify ways to increase adherence. Working with researchers from
Harvard and Brigham and Women's Hospital, the company expects
knowledge gained from the research will help health professionals
better understand patient behavior and lead to developing programs
that health care providers and pharmacies can use to improve
medication adherence and ultimately help improve patient care and
medical outcomes by avoiding costly hospital treatment. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090226/NE75914LOGO )
Non-adherence to essential chronic medications has been widely
recognized as a major public health problem, according to prior
research cited in numerous medical journals. One quarter of
original prescriptions for essential medications are never filled,
and patients with important chronic diseases such as diabetes and
coronary artery disease adhere to their medication only about half
of the time. Non-adherence to essential medications is a frequent
cause of preventable hospitalizations and patient illness, with
costs to the U.S. health care system estimated at over $200 billion
annually. A better understanding of the predictors of non-adherence
and strategies to improve medication use has the potential to
meaningfully impact the public health. "As the nation looks for
ways to reduce health care spending, we need to improve patient
compliance with prescribed drug therapies," said Troyen A. Brennan,
M.D., Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer, CVS
Caremark. "Many reasons have been discussed for patient
non-adherence, including cost, forgetfulness, confusion when taking
multiple medications, and problems with renewing a prescription.
This research, which will be available not only to CVS affiliates
but to all pharmacies, will help doctors, pharmacies, hospitals and
health plans design programs to help patients stay on their
prescribed medication treatments." Dr. Brennan says non-compliance
with a prescribed drug reduces or eliminates the positive effects
of a medication. Patients who fail to take prescriptions properly
can face unnecessary and costly treatments, such as hospital
admissions, re-admissions, and surgeries. Patients are considered
to be non-compliant if they do not fill a new prescription or do
not refill an existing one, take appropriate medication incorrectly
(e.g., on the wrong schedule) or take the wrong medication dose
(e.g., dose is too low). To address this significant public health
problem, CVS Caremark, through a research agreement, is working
with faculty from Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical
School and Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences to develop an
interdisciplinary initiative to improve medication use. The
interdisciplinary approach allows experts in disciplines like
psychology, sociology and political studies to bring their
expertise about patient behavior and health care policy to bear on
a complex public health problem. This research collaboration has
four key components: -- Determine causes and scope of abandoned
prescriptions -- Researchers know little about how often and why
prescriptions are filled but not picked up at the pharmacy. A
better understanding of the types of essential medication abandoned
and the predictors of abandonment can be used to create better
approaches to medication delivery. Specifically, the team will
study the effect of different insurance structures to help design
plans to support medication adherence. The study also seeks to
determine the impact of the current economic downturn on insurance
coverage and prescription abandonment to provide guidance on how
best to support patient health in such economic conditions. --
Drive adherence through simplification and consolidation -- In a
fragmented health care system, there are numerous sources of
complexity that may interfere with medication adherence. Patients
see multiple physicians, are charged multiple copayments for
different medications, may use multiple pharmacies and may have to
make many trips to the pharmacy to manage their medications. The
research team will seek to assess how actions such as simplifying
drug regimens and consolidating pharmacy management services within
a "pharmacy home" can improve adherence. This research will provide
the basic knowledge needed to help pharmacies, insurers and doctors
simplify medication use and encourage adherence. -- Evaluate the
clinical and financial value of adherence incentives -- Scientific
literature has discussed the notion that rewarding desired behavior
is a powerful tool to stimulate that behavior. The team is
developing a randomized controlled trial of the effects of
providing rewards for optimal medication adherence with the goal of
better engaging patients in their medical care in order to improve
their health. The results can provide a rigorous evaluation of the
clinical and financial value of implementing novel insurance
designs on patient behavior. -- Determine how electronic
prescribing impacts costs, compliance and safety -- Many health
care experts are looking to improved health information technology
to reduce health care costs and improve safety. The researchers
will examine the role that ePrescribing can play in adherence in
helping companies better understand and evaluate how electronic
prescriptions and processing impact medication costs, adherence and
safety. This is especially important as Medicare has launched an
initiative to drive electronic prescriptions. "This research will
help us understand the reasons why patients do not take their
medications as prescribed. We will use this information to develop
effective, evidence-based approaches to improve prescription
adherence," said William Shrank, M.D., MSHS of Brigham and Women's
Hospital and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical
School, and principal investigator of the program. "We'll strive to
better understand barriers to adherence that range from patient
characteristics (e.g. income or marital status); patients'
attitudes about their condition and the importance of medicine;
understanding how to take medications appropriately; the impact of
complex therapy; and, the trust and communication between the
patient, the physician and the pharmacist. We hope this research
will help us create strategies to promote wellness in our patients.
" About CVS Caremark CVS Caremark is the largest provider of
prescriptions in the nation. The Company fills or manages more than
1 billion prescriptions annually. Through its unmatched breadth of
service offerings, CVS Caremark is transforming the delivery of
health care services in the U.S. The Company is uniquely positioned
to effectively manage costs and improve health care outcomes
through its more than 7,000 CVS/pharmacy and Longs Drugs stores;
its Caremark Pharmacy Services division (pharmacy benefit
management, mail order and specialty pharmacy); its retail-based
health clinic subsidiary, MinuteClinic; and its online pharmacy,
CVS.com. General information about CVS Caremark is available
through the Investor Relations section of the Company's Web site,
at cvscaremark.com/investors, as well as through the press room
section of the Company's Web site, at cvscaremark.com/newsroom.
Contacts: Jon Sandberg Nancy Christal Corporate Communications
Senior Vice President (401) 770-4914 Investor Relations (914)
722-4704 http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090226/NE75914LOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: CVS Caremark CONTACT: Jon
Sandberg, Corporate Communications, +1-401-770-4914, or Nancy
Christal, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations,
+1-914-722-4704, both of CVS Caremark Web Site:
http://www.cvscaremark.com/
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