2008
DOI: 10.1179/175709208x334614
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Calculating medication compliance, adherence and persistence in administrative pharmacy claims databases

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Cited by 78 publications
(69 citation statements)
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“…by guest on May 11, 2018 http://circoutcomes.ahajournals.org/ Downloaded from were shorter than both 60 and 30 days, these 2 permissible gaps were used for persistence calculations. 31,32 Patients who did not discontinue treatment but died, disenrolled from the health plan, or continued therapy beyond the study period were considered censored within the discontinuation analysis.…”
Section: What the Study Addsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…by guest on May 11, 2018 http://circoutcomes.ahajournals.org/ Downloaded from were shorter than both 60 and 30 days, these 2 permissible gaps were used for persistence calculations. 31,32 Patients who did not discontinue treatment but died, disenrolled from the health plan, or continued therapy beyond the study period were considered censored within the discontinuation analysis.…”
Section: What the Study Addsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exact mechanisms of building a PDC report have previously been described. [30][31][32][33][34] One difference in our report is that we used a medication identification number (MedID) to identify similar prescriptions of the same drug, compared with most other PDC calculations, which used generic code numbers (GCN) to identify prescriptions with the same drug and the same or different dose. GCNs are obtained through insurance claims data and are not tracked through internal pharmacy prescription fill records.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indirect, methods are based on the assessment of clinical responses by medical professionals, patient questionnaires about adherence, patient diaries, and pill counting. Other types of adherence measurements [3][4][5][6] include medication possession ratio and related measures of medication availability, discontinuation/continuation, switching, medication gaps, refill compliance, and retentiveness/turbulence. A comprehensive list of existing methods is presented in [7].…”
Section: Patient Compliancementioning
confidence: 99%