Physicians in the intervention group used ePrescribing to track medication fills and refills. The application also offered physicians the option to take it one step further: To review detailed adherence data, including estimates of the proportion of time that the patients took their medication.
Medication adherence for both groups was measured by using both electronic prescriptions and pharmacy claims for medication fills and refills.
Researchers found ICS adherence to be very similar among patients in the intervention group and those in the control group (21.3 percent vs. 23.3 percent).
But adherence was significantly higher in the intervention group (35 percent) when the patient's physician elected to view detailed adherence information via the ePrescribing application.
Few physicians, however, in the intervention group accessed the detailed adherence information. "Going forward, one of the obstacles will be finding time for physicians to review and discuss this information with patients in their typically busy practices," says Dr. Williams.
Source: Henry Ford Health System