Background. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic systemic inflammatory disease affecting
<1% of the population. Incompletely controlled RA results in fatigue, joint and soft tissue pain, progressive joint damage,
reduced quality of life, and increased cardiovascular mortality. Despite an increasing range of disease modifying agents which
halt disease progression, poor patient adherence with medication is a significant barrier to management. Objective.
The goal of this review was to examine the effectiveness of measures to improve patient medication adherence. Methods.
Studies addressing treatment adherence in patients with RA were identified by trawling PsycINFO, Medline,
Cochrane, Pubmed, and ProQuest for studies published between January 2000 and October 2014.
Articles were independently reviewed to identify relevant studies. Results. Current strategies were of
limited efficacy in improving patient adherence with medications used to treat RA. Conclusion.
Poor medication adherence is a complex issue. Low educational levels and limited health literacy are contributory factors.
Psychological models may assist in explaining medication nonadherence. Increasing patient knowledge of their disease seems
sensible. Existing educational interventions appear ineffective at improving medication adherence, probably due to an overemphasis
on provision of biomedical information. A novel approach to patient education using musculoskeletal ultrasound is proposed.
Showing patients with RA 'real-time' US images of clinically inflamed joints resulted in a more favorable cost-benefit analysis, that is, increased patient belief in the necessity of medication versus concern about taking medication. There was no change in patient activation, medication adherence or disease severity.
Memory failure is a common clinical concern of patients with epilepsy and is associated with significant functional impairments. Thus, memory rehabilitation is of critical clinical importance. In this article, we aimed to systematically evaluate the efficacy of memory rehabilitation in patients with epilepsy. The Preferred Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) was used to guide searches, extraction and reporting of data in this review. PsycINFO, Medline and PsychBITE searches yielded 95 studies. Twelve papers met inclusion criteria, reporting outcomes of cognitive or behavioural interventions that specifically targeted the rehabilitation of memory in patients with epilepsy. Methodological rigour was rated using the Single-Case Experimental Design (SCED) scale for single-case studies and a modified version of the Downs and Black checklist for group studies. Twelve prospective studies, nine group (six pre-post design, one waitlist crossover, two randomised controlled trials) and three single-case studies were identified. Eleven of the studies included adults, eight of which involved adults with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). One paediatric study was identified. The quality of group studies ranged from 36% (poor) to 72% (good), using the modified Downs and Black checklist. Single-case studies were assessed using the SCED scale and assessed to range in quality from four to seven out to 11. Overall, memory rehabilitation was associated with improved memory function in all studies. Verbal memory outcomes were most commonly examined and associated with improvements. This review found that the level of evidence available to support rehabilitation of memory in patients with epilepsy was generally weak and inconsistent. Nevertheless, studies conducted to date, albeit of limited methodological quality, offer preliminary evidence that memory rehabilitation is associated with improvements in verbal memory in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. Little is known about the efficacy of memory rehabilitation in patients with non-TLE, children, and other aspects of memory difficulties. Guidelines for future research are proposed.
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