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'New Medicine Service':supporting adherence in people starting a new medication for a long-term condition: 26-week follow-up of a pragmatic randomised controlled trial
- Source :
- Elliott, R A, Boyd, M J, Tanajewski, L, Barber, N, Gkountouras, G, Avery, A J, Mehta, R, Davies, J E, Salema, N-E, Craig, C, Latif, A, Waring, J & Chuter, A 2019, ' 'New Medicine Service' : supporting adherence in people starting a new medication for a long-term condition: 26-week follow-up of a pragmatic randomised controlled trial ', BMJ Quality and Safety . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2018-009177
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- ObjectiveTo examine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the community pharmacy New Medicine Service (NMS) at 26 weeks.MethodsPragmatic patient-level parallel randomised controlled trial in 46 English community pharmacies. 504 participants aged ≥14, identified in the pharmacy when presenting a prescription for a new medicine for predefined long-term conditions, randomised to receive NMS (n=251) or normal practice (n=253) (NMS intervention: 2 consultations 1 and 2 weeks after prescription presentation). Adherence assessed through patient self-report at 26-week follow-up. Intention-to-treat analysis employed. National Health Service (NHS) costs calculated. Disease-specific Markov models estimating impact of non-adherence combined with clinical trial data to calculate costs per extra quality-adjusted life-year (QALY; NHS England perspective).ResultsUnadjusted analysis: of 327 patients still taking the initial medicine, 97/170 (57.1%) and 103/157 (65.6%) (p=0.113) patients were adherent in normal practice and NMS arms, respectively. Adjusted intention-to-treat analysis: adherence OR 1.50 (95% CI 0.93 to 2.44, p=0.095), in favour of NMS. There was a non-significant reduction in 26-week NHS costs for NMS: −£104 (95% CI −£37 to £257, p=0.168) per patient. NMS generated a mean of 0.04 (95% CI −0.01 to 0.13) more QALYs per patient, with mean reduction in lifetime cost of −£113.9 (−1159.4, 683.7). The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was −£2758/QALY (2.5% and 97.5%: −38 739.5, 34 024.2. NMS has an 89% probability of cost-effectiveness at a willingness to pay of £20 000 per QALY.ConclusionsAt 26-week follow-up, NMS was unable to demonstrate a statistically significant increase in adherence or reduction in NHS costs, which may be attributable to patient attrition from the study. Long-term economic evaluation suggested NMS may deliver better patient outcomes and reduced overall healthcare costs than normal practice, but uncertainty around this finding is high.Trial registration numberNCT01635361, ISRCTN23560818, ISRCTN23560818, UKCRN12494.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors
Cost effectiveness
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Pharmacy
Community Pharmacy Services
State Medicine
Medication Adherence
law.invention
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Randomized controlled trial
Willingness to pay
law
Health care
Humans
Medicine
030212 general & internal medicine
Medical prescription
Aged
business.industry
030503 health policy & services
Health Policy
Middle Aged
Clinical trial
England
Economic evaluation
Emergency medicine
Female
0305 other medical science
business
Follow-Up Studies
Program Evaluation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Elliott, R A, Boyd, M J, Tanajewski, L, Barber, N, Gkountouras, G, Avery, A J, Mehta, R, Davies, J E, Salema, N-E, Craig, C, Latif, A, Waring, J & Chuter, A 2019, ' 'New Medicine Service' : supporting adherence in people starting a new medication for a long-term condition: 26-week follow-up of a pragmatic randomised controlled trial ', BMJ Quality and Safety . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2018-009177
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c86846c65064a56c59ded2e3db88390b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2018-009177