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Mailed reminders encourage Heart Attack
Patients to take medicine
By Glenda Fauntleroy, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Mailing patients who have suffered a heart
attack an easy-to-read, personal reminder
can increase the odds that they will
continue to take their necessary
beta-blocker medication, new research says.
More than 7 million American adults have had
a heart attack, and treatment guidelines
encourage these patients to take a
beta-blocker medication — such as Tenormin
or Lopressor — to increase their chances of
survival.
Although doctors routinely prescribe
beta-blockers to these patients, many stop
taking the medication over time.
Researchers of the new study, appearing in
the March 10 issue of the Archives of
Internal Medicine, wanted to see if patients
who received a personalized letter from
their health plan reminding them to take
their medication would be more likely to do
so.
They found patients were indeed 17 percent
more likely to follow to their beta-blocker
therapy after receiving the patient
literature.
“Our hope was closer to a 10 percent
increase, so our finding that patients were
17 percent more likely to be adherent using
such a low-cost communication method is very
encouraging,” said David H. Smith, Ph.D.,
who led the group of researchers from the
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research
in Portland, Ore.
Smith and his colleagues evaluated 836
patients who had had a heart attack in the
past year of the study, which took place at
four health maintenance organizations across
the country from June 2004 to March 2005.
The study participants received two
mailings, two months apart.
The researchers used the proportion of days
patients took their beta-blocker medication
— considered “days covered”— as the main
outcome measure.
The study found patients who received
direct-to-patient communication had an
increase of 4.3 percent days covered per
month compared to patients in the control
group.
What seemed to be the biggest motivating
factor for those patients?
“We think a key was the inclusion of a
wallet-size card and personalized letter
with specific messages regarding both the
benefits of beta-blocker therapy and the
risk of not taking them,” Smith said.
“We also emphasized the importance of
patients talking with their doctor about
side effects and other treatments that might
be beneficial.”
Samuel Sears, Ph.D., director of the Health
Psychology Program at East Carolina
University in Greenville, N.C., agreed these
types of patient mailings are worthwhile.
“Direct-to-patient communication is a modern
strategy employed by other entities related
to patient health, such as pharmaceutical
makers, because it has some effectiveness,”
he said.
“Health care organizations use these
newsletter tools as informational and
relationship-building, [and] the current
study provides evidence that they have
clinical utility.”
The Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality provided support for this study.
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