Trajectories of and clinical pharmacist impact on long-term oral antidiabetic medication adherence
- At: Glasgow (Scotland) (2018)
- Type: Poster
- Poster code: POS-SAP-012
- By: GATWOOD, Justin (University of Tennessee College of Pharmacy, Clinical Pharmacy)
- Co-author(s): Justin Gatwood: Clinical Pharmacy, University of Tennessee College of Pharmacy, Nashville, United States
Marie Chisholm-Burns: University of Tennessee College of Pharmacy, Memphis, United States
Robert Davis: Pediatrics, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, United States
Fridtjof Thomas: Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, United States
Praveen Potukuchi: University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, United States
Adriana Hung: Nephrology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, United States
Michael McFarland: Pharmacy, VA Tennessee Valley Healthcare System, Nashville, United States
Csaba Kovesdy: Nephrology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, United States;Nephrology, Memphis VA Medical Center, Memphis, United States - Abstract:
Background
While extensive research has investigated medication use among adults with diabetes, few have tracked the trajectory of adherence over multiple years after treatment initiation. Moreover, in the context of long-term medication use, the impact of pharmacist visits have not been significantly studied as a predictor of multi-year adherence.M..
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Last update 28 September 2023