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Free Essential Medicines may Improve Medication-adherence

by Ramya Rachamanti on October 8, 2019 at 11:23 AM

Majority of the patients who told they cant afford their medications adhered to treatment when they received free essential medicines for one year in a randomized clinical trial, but not all measures of health outcomes improved.


Patients were randomly split into two groups: 395 received free essential medicines plus usual care and 391 had usual care and usual access to medicines. Medicines aren't universally publicly funded in Canada like hospitalizations and physician care are.

‘More people who received free essential medicines were adherent to their medication than those who have usual access to medicine.’

Free medicines included in the trial were treatments for chronic conditions, such as antipsychotics, antiretrovirals, glucose-lowering medicines and antihypertensives, and for acute conditions, such as antibiotics and analgesics.

Researchers report more people who received free essential medicines were appropriately adherent (151 of 395 or 38.2%) compared with those in the group with usual access to medicine (104 of 391 or 26.6%).

The free distribution of medicine reduced systolic blood pressure among those prescribed an antihypertensive but it didn't significantly improve low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and there was a nonsignificant improvement in diabetes control (decrease in hemoglobin A1c ) in those prescribed treatment to control diabetes.

The importance of these findings from one high-income country should be applied cautiously to other locales with different health care systems.



Source: Eurekalert

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