Patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) who are on dialysis have to make significant adaptions to their life, accepting dietary and fluid restrictions, rigorous medication regimens, and complex renal replacement therapy routines. 1 Patients also have to cope with the multiple self-management challenges related to complications and comorbidities associated with ESKD, diminished independence, loss of time spent on dialysis, travel limitations, and financial burden. 2 Adherence to the demanding physical and behavioral adaptions are central to the effective delivery of ESKD care, 1 yet low adherence to all domains of ESKD therapy (diet, fluid, medication, and dialysis) is common. 3-5 Nonadherence to treatment is associated with increased risk of mortality, hospitalizations, complications, and poor quality of life in dialysis patients. 6-8 Given the high baseline risk of adverse outcomes experienced by ESKD patients, it is instinctive to examine whether strategies to promote treatment adherence could improve clinical outcomes. In the context of long-term therapies of chronic diseases, it has been suggested that a more significant impact on the population health outcomes could result from the introduction of effective adherence interventions than any improvement in specific medical treatments. 9 Several randomized and nonrandomized trials have examined the effectiveness of diverse adherence intervention strategies on the direct or indirect markers of adherence in dialysis patients. 10-12 In this review, we plan to explore the nature of these