• Health affairs · Jan 2011

    Medication adherence leads to lower health care use and costs despite increased drug spending.

    • M Christopher Roebuck, Joshua N Liberman, Marin Gemmill-Toyama, and Troyen A Brennan.
    • CVS Caremark, Hunt Valley, Maryland, USA. chris.roebuck@caremark.com
    • Health Aff (Millwood). 2011 Jan 1; 30 (1): 91-9.

    AbstractResearchers have routinely found that improved medication adherence--getting people to take medicine prescribed for them--is associated with greatly reduced total health care use and costs. But previous studies do not provide strong evidence of a causal link. This article employs a more robust methodology to examine the relationship. Our results indicate that although improved medication adherence by people with four chronic vascular diseases increased pharmacy costs, it also produced substantial medical savings as a result of reductions in hospitalization and emergency department use. Our findings indicate that programs to improve medication adherence are worth consideration by insurers, government payers, and patients, as long as intervention costs do not exceed the estimated health care cost savings.

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