How can we improve adherence?

Many patients with wound healing difficulties are also coping with the management of a chronic disease or chronic condition that requires them to make lifestyle behaviour changes, for example, managing glucose levels through diet and exercise and regular foot inspection. Many find it difficult to make such changes and often experience feelings of powerlessness when faced with a lifetime of behavioural and psychological change. This article will explore the importance of understanding the patient difficulties associated with adherence to a regime and how life changes can be difficult to maintain over sustained periods of time. However, the article will also discuss the importance of this topic in trying to understand the clinical evidence base for treatment – as many clinical trials investigating treatments for the diabetic foot do not include information on the extent to which patients in the trial conformed to the trial protocol. The article gives an overview of recent developments – including lessons we can learn from other chronic conditions where permanent life changes are required – in particular the need to keep health messages simple, tailored to the individual and repeated frequently. The evidence to date suggests that no one single form of adherence intervention will work with all patients; this is not surprising given complex and multifactorial nature of adherence and the myriad of barriers that exist that patients and health care professionals need to overcome. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

[1]  W. Assendelft,et al.  Patient education for preventing diabetic foot ulceration. , 2014, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[2]  D. Armstrong,et al.  Activity patterns of patients with diabetic foot ulceration: patients with active ulceration may not adhere to a standard pressure off-loading regimen. , 2003, Diabetes care.

[3]  Anne E. K. Roberts,et al.  Patients’ Experience of therapeutic footwear whilst living at risk of neuropathic diabetic foot ulceration: an interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) , 2014, Journal of Foot and Ankle Research.

[4]  D. Margolis,et al.  Health literacy and diabetic foot ulcer healing , 2015, Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society.

[5]  A. M. Greca,et al.  Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus , 2009 .

[6]  R. Koopman,et al.  Impact of the population at risk of diabetes on projections of diabetes burden in the United States: an epidemic on the way , 2006, Diabetologia.

[7]  A. Searle,et al.  A qualitative approach to understanding the experience of ulceration and healing in the diabetic foot: patient and podiatrist persepctives , 2005 .

[8]  S. Bus,et al.  Prevention of foot ulcers in the at‐risk patient with diabetes: a systematic review , 2016, Diabetes/metabolism research and reviews.

[9]  W. O'donohue,et al.  Patient Adherence and Nonadherence to Treatments: An Overview for Health Care Providers , 2006 .

[10]  Caroline E Fife,et al.  Why is it so hard to do the right thing in wound care? , 2010, Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society.

[11]  T. Kohlmann,et al.  Prevalence of diabetic foot syndrome and its risk factors in the UK. , 2010, Journal of wound care.

[12]  Jenny Donovan,et al.  Evaluating meta-ethnography: a synthesis of qualitative research on lay experiences of diabetes and diabetes care. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[13]  K. Corace,et al.  When knowledge is not enough: Changing behavior to change vaccination results , 2014, Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics.

[14]  D. Bild,et al.  Reduction of Lower Extremity Clinical Abnormalities in Patients with Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus , 1993, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[15]  Dylan S. Small,et al.  Low Health Literacy Predicts Misperceptions of Diabetes Control in Patients With Persistently Elevated A1C , 2015, The Diabetes educator.

[16]  Andrew Steptoe,et al.  Association between low functional health literacy and mortality in older adults: longitudinal cohort study , 2012, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[17]  J. Suico,et al.  Behaviors predicting foot lesions in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus , 1998, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[18]  A. L. Caze,et al.  What are validated self‐report adherence scales really measuring?: a systematic review , 2014, British journal of clinical pharmacology.

[19]  P Michael Ho,et al.  Medication Adherence: Its Importance in Cardiovascular Outcomes , 2009, Circulation.

[20]  P. Burkhart,et al.  Adherence to long-term therapies: evidence for action. , 2003, Journal of nursing scholarship : an official publication of Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing.

[21]  Naresh Bellam,et al.  Strategies to enhance patient adherence: making it simple. , 2005, MedGenMed : Medscape general medicine.

[22]  D. Blake,et al.  Patient non-compliance: deviance or reasoned decision-making? , 1992, Social science & medicine.

[23]  S. van Dulmen,et al.  Patient adherence to medical treatment: a review of reviews , 2007, BMC Health Services Research.