• Arch Intern Med · Apr 2003

    Comparative Study

    The role of adherence on the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic interventions: evidence from the delirium prevention trial.

    • Sharon K Inouye, Sidney T Bogardus, Christianna S Williams, Linda Leo-Summers, and Joseph V Agostini.
    • Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06504, USA.
    • Arch Intern Med. 2003 Apr 28;163(8):958-64.

    BackgroundThe impact of adherence on outcome for a nonpharmacologic intervention strategy has not been previously examined.ObjectiveTo examine the impact of level of adherence on effectiveness of the intervention strategy in a large clinical trial of nonpharmacologic interventions to prevent delirium.MethodsThe subjects included 422 consecutive patients 70 years or older admitted to the medicine service at a university hospital. The intervention protocols were targeted toward 6 delirium risk factors. The primary outcome was new-onset delirium during hospitalization.ResultsDuring 9882 patient-days, complete adherence rates for individual intervention protocols ranged from 10% for the sleep protocol to 86% for the orientation protocol. The rate of complete adherence with all protocols was 57%, and combined partial and complete adherence was 87%. Higher levels of adherence resulted in lower delirium rates, with a significant graded effect, for orientation, mobility, and therapeutic activities protocols, and for the composite adherence measure. After controlling for potential confounding variables, such as illness severity, comorbidity, baseline delirium risk, and functional status, adherence continued to demonstrate a consistently strong and significant protective effect against delirium (adjusted odds ratio, 0.69; 95% confidence interval, 0.56-0.87). Patients in the highest adherence group demonstrated an 89% reduction in delirium risk compared with patients in the lowest group.ConclusionsAdherence played an important independent role in the effectiveness of a nonpharmacologic multicomponent intervention strategy. Higher levels of adherence resulted in reduced rates of delirium in a directly graded fashion, with extremely low levels of delirium in the highest adherence group. Thus, adherence must be ensured in nonpharmacologic interventions to optimize effectiveness.

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