Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients have been known to have poor medication adherence rates. The purpose of this systematic review was to assess if outreach services could impact on medication compliance rates. CINAHL, Medline, Clinical Key and Cochrane library were all searched electronically along with grey literature for all eligible studies conducted on COPD patients in a non-acute hospital setting. Systematic review methodology was followed for data selection, extraction and risk of bias, validity testing and data analysis. Eight studies met all inclusion criteria. 4 randomised control trials and 4 quantitative intention-to-treat studies. 2 of the studies failed validity testing but due to a lack of articles, were included in the synthesis. Given the heterogeneity of data, a narrative synthesis was adopted. All 8 studies demonstrated the ability for an outreach service to improve medication adherence in the community setting. Secondary to this result, this systematic review showed the ability to reduce hospital admissions of exacerbations of COPD due to increased medication adherence. Quality of life was assessed but did not improve but importantly did not decrease. Medication adherence has the potential to be improved from an outreach programme but requires more high-quality research in the area to develop a standardised plan of care to identify the most effective way of educating patients on medication adherence. Medication adherence education should not be a once-off assessment, this systematic review has shown it must be continuous, re-checked and re-educated regularly.
Disclosure of interest
The authors report no conflict of interest.