Title: Enhancing our Patients Compliance with their Medical Regimen
1Enhancing our Patients Compliance with their
Medical Regimen
- Phil Mendys, Pharm D, FAHA, CPP,
- Co-Director, UNC Lipid and
- Prevention Clinic
2Disclosures
- Dr. Mendys is an employee of Pfizer and works as
a Senior Director in Medical Affairs. - Dr. Mendys carries both academic and clinical
appointments at the University of North Carolina
in the School of Medicine-Division of Cardiology
and the School of Pharmacy- Pharmacotherapy and
Experimental Therapeutics.
3(No Transcript)
4Talk Objectives
- Key Concepts in Medication Adherence
- Making the case for supporting Adherence Programs
Case Study with Dyslipidemia - Cardiac Rehabilitation A Perfect Match to
Improve Patient Outcomes - Patient Provider Quiz-
- Facts and misperceptions
5Heart medicine advances helppatients enjoy
active lifeBritish Heart Foundation July 9, 2011
- In the 1960s, there was no treatment for a heart
attack. If they survived, victims were confined
to a hospital bed, given painkillers and told to
take complete restIf they died in their 50s or
60sit was considered a fact of life
6The Burden of Chronic Disease
- poor adherence increases with the duration and
complexity of treatment regimensduration and
complex treatment are inherent to chronic
illnesses. Across diseases, adherence is the
single most important modifiable factor that
compromises treatment outcome. -
- - World Health
Organization, 2003
7The Five Dimensions of Adherence
- Health System/Health Care Team Factors
- Patient-related Factors
- Social/Economic Factors
- Condition-related Factors
- Therapy-related Factors
HCT health care team
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland. 2003.
8Health Care System Factors That Affect Adherence
Extent to which the health care system
facilitates or impedes providers
adherence-related activities Organizational
structures and processes
- Resources and set policies that support optimal
practices - Provision of preventive services
- Integration of other health care professionals as
part of the treatment - To augment role of primary providers
- To provide more intensive intervention when
needed - Mandatory provisions that allow
- Educating providers about guidelines
- Training in treatment strategies (including
patient counseling) - Providing office support mechanisms
- Cost
Koeck C. BMJ. 19983171267-1268 Ockene IS, et
al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 200240630-640.
9Case Study Cholesterol ManagementWhen to Start
Cholesterol Lowering Therapy in Patients with
Coronary Heart DiseaseA Statement for Healthcare
Professionals From the AHA Task Force on Risk
Reduction
- several studies suggest that plasma lipoprotein
measurements can be made immediately upon
admission to the hospital for acute coronary
syndromes to establish a baseline cholesterol
levels. - If LDL cholesterol gt 130 at time of discharge, a
cholesterol-reducing drug can reasonably be
started at time of discharge - one important issue concerns responsibility for
initiating cholesterol-lowering therapy in the
setting of acute coronary eventsdivided
responsibility often lead to no therapy at all.
Circulation. 1997 951683-85
10Improved Treatment of Coronary Heart Disease by
Implementation of Cardiac Hospitalization
Atherosclerosis Management Program (CHAMP)
Fonarow G., et.al. Am J Cardiol 2001 87819-22
11 Provider Factors
- Counseling skills
- Involvement of patients in decision-making/plan
of care - Time constraints
- Knowledge, awareness, adherence to clinical
practice guidelines - Individual vs team-provider approach
12Recognizing Predictors of poor adherence
N Engl J Med 2005353487-97.
13What Drives Health Care Team to Improve
Adherence?
- Knowledge of the broad determinants of
nonadherence - Ability to assess, detect, and understand the
potential for nonadherence - Understand how patients might progress to
adherence - Develop specific strategies for addressing
adherence - Tailor interventions to the needs of individual
patients
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland, 2003.
14A Tool to Improve Adherence
15Patient Factors
- Knowledge, attitudes, skills
- Organic factors (memory, cognitive-information
processing) - Self-efficacy
- Decision-making processes discounting
- Co-morbidities/complexity of therapeutic regimen
- Individual resources
16Patient Reasons for Nonadherence
Just forget
Dont think its necessary all the time
Hate taking drugs
Dont like being dependent
Drugs give me side effects
Dont think drugs are working
Too expensive
Dont like being told what to take
Supply will last longer
Other
Prospective, open-label, interview-based study in
metropolitan New York area pharmacies (N821).
Cheng JWM, et al. Pharmacotherapy.
200121828-841.
17Health Literacy and Heart Disease
- Over the past 50 years, we have learn a lot about
the relationships between risk factors and the
cause of cardiovascular illness, but we have much
work yet to do in the area of preventing heart
disease. - Ones ability to read, listen, and comprehend
health information is a vital element of
maintaining and improving health, including the
prevention of chronic illness. - Evidence has shown that improved knowledge of
ones condition may improve patient adherence to
lifestyle changes and the use of preventive
medication, however-
Vascular Health and Risk Management 20062(4)
18Literacy Skills and Calculated 10-Year Risk of
Coronary Heart Disease
Literacy skills 1. reading comprehension,2.num
eracy 3. oral language (speaking) 4. aural
language (listening)
J Gen Intern Med DOI 10.1007/s11606-010-1488-5,
published online Aug 10, 2010
19A meta-analysis of the association between
adherence to drug therapy and mortality
- good adherence was associated with lower
mortality - association between good adherence to placebo and
mortality supports the existence of the healthy
adherer effect - adherence to drug therapy may be a surrogate
marker for overall healthy behavior.
BMJ 20063331-6
20What Drives Patients to Improve Adherence?
- People learn best by active participation
- Individuals need to have adequate information
- Individuals need to believe in their ability to
make changes (self-efficacy) and have positive
expected outcomes - Individuals need skills, support, resources
- Interventions need to be tailored to the
individual or organization and its social context
Bandura A. Social Foundations of Thought and
Action A Social Cognitive Theory. Englewood
Cliffs, NJ Prentice Hall 1986.
21Adherence Social/Economic Factors
- Formal/informal support from members of the
community - Awareness level of policy makers and health
managers - Application of adherence materials to different
socioeconomic settings - Health system programs promoting
adherence/self-management - Socioeconomic status, literacy/education,
employment, living conditions, distance from
treatment center, transportation, medication
cost, environment, culture/beliefs about
illness/treatment, fear of health care system,
and family dysfunction - Poverty and chronic disease interrelationships,
compounding non-adherence
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland. 2003.
22Societal Factors
- Examples
- Obesity
- Food used to be expensive now its cheap
- Physical activity used to be cheap now its
expensive - Smoking
- Was associated with style and freedom of choice
now its considered unhealthy and socially
incorrect
23 Adherence Condition-related Factors
- Illness-related demands faced by the patient,
affecting patients risk perception and the
priority placed on adherence - Severity of symptoms and level of disability
- Severity of the disease and rate of disease
progression - Availability of effective treatments
- Co-morbidities, such as depression
- Drug and alcohol abuse
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland. 2003.
24Better Knowledge Improves Adherence to
Lifestyle Changes and
Medication in Patients With CHD
- Men and women, lt71 years, who had a cardiac event
(n509) - 392 interviewed, examined, and received a
questionnaire - 347 completed questionnaire about their general
knowledge of CHD risk factors, compliance to
lifestyle changes, and drug adherence - Statistically significant correlation between CHD
risk factor knowledge and compliance to certain
lifestyle changes (weight, physical activity,
stress management, diet, attaining lipid level
goals, likelihood of taking prescribed
antihypertensives) - No correlation between this knowledge and blood
glucose or blood pressure levels nor smoking
habits or treatment patterns for prescribed
lipid- and blood glucose-lowering drugs - Knowledge correlated to patient behavior with
respect to some risk factors, which should be
recognized in prevention programs
Alm-Roijer C, et al. Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs.
20043321-330.
25Adherence Therapy-related factors
- Complexity of the medical regimen, concomitant
medications - Frequency and duration of treatment
- Previous treatment failures
- Frequent changes in treatment
- Immediacy of beneficial effects and side effects,
availability of medical support to deal with them
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland. 2003.
26Nonadherence to Statin Treatment begins early
Adherence continues to drop over time,
particularly when treating the asymptomatic
patient
Adapted from cohort study using linked
population-based administration data from
Ontario, Canada (N85,020). Jackevicius et al.
JAMA. 2002288462-467.
27Adherence Measurements
- Patient self-reports or questionnaires
- Clinician perception
- Pill counts
- Electronic monitoring devices
- Biochemical measurement or pharmacologic tracers
- Electronic prescription refill records (refill
rates)
Most adherence research is observational, rather
than Conducted in a trial setting, to better
reflect real-world patient behavior.
Sikka R, et al. Am J Manag Care. 200511449-457
World Health Organization. World Health
Organization Geneva, Switzerland, 2003.
28Meta-analysis of trials of interventionsto
improve medication adherence
- Medication non-adherence has a profound negative
impact on every - aspect of health care. For decades we have
searched for that one perfect solution to the
problem however, there does not seem to be any
one - intervention that robustly enhances adherence,
perhaps because so many - variables affect a patients decision to take a
drug. A combined approach intuitively may best
address patients needs, but more data must be
collected through standardized research methods.
Studies focusing on the relationship between
adherence and health outcome measures, specific
interventions, and cost-effectiveness and between
adherence and various combinations of
interventions are needed - Conclusion
- Meta-analysis of studies of interventions to
improve medication adherence - revealed an increase in adherence of 411. No
single strategy appeared to be best.
Am J Health-Syst PharmVol 60 Apr 1, 2003
29Thus, a Multifaceted Approach to Patient
Treatment is Required
Payers
(employers/HP/PBM)
Pharmacy
IVR
AdhereRx
AdhereRx
HAL, CAVEAT Pilot
HAL, HEART
Physician
Physician
AdhereRx
CareMark Refill Reminder
Pharmacy First
House CallPoster
Starters
Physician
Physician
Pharmacy bag
Pharmacy bag
CVS Mailer
newsletter
newsletter
direction to
direction to
patient
patient
Patient
Refill Reminder
Refill Reminder
Starters
Starters
Letters
Letters
Follow
-
up
Follow
-
up
Follow
--
up
Follow
-
-up
with patient
with patient
with patient
with patient
Starters
House Call Radio
800 IVR
800 IVR
Family/
Nurse
DTC Print
DTC Print
Peers
Website
Web
DTC TV
DTC TV
Direct Mail
My Heart Wise
Outbound Direct Mail
Direct to Consumer
30The challenge of non-adherence
- More than 50 of patients with diabetes,
hypertension, tobacco addiction, hyperlipidemia,
congestive heart failure, asthma, depression, and
chronic atrial fibrillation are currently managed
inadequately.1-9 - 18,000 Americans die each year from heart attacks
because they did not receive preventive
medications, although they were eligible for
them.10-11 - Low adherence to prescribed treatments is common
typical adherence rates for prescribed
medications are 50 with a range of 0100.12 - 1/3 or more of ambulatory patients take
prescribed doses at intervals that frequently are
longer than prescribedhours, days, sometimes
weeks.13 - Within 6 months, 60 of patients discontinue
their CV prevention medications.
1. Institute of Medicine, 2003c 2. Clark et al.,
2000 3. Joint National Committee on Prevention,
1997 4. Legorreta et al., 2000 5. McBride et
al., 1998 6. Ni et al., 1998 7. Perez-Stable
and Fuentes-Afflick, 1998 8. Samsa et al., 2000
9. Young et al., 200110. Chassin, 1997 11.
Institute of Medicine, 2003a. 12. Sackett and
Snow, 1979 13. Houston, et al. 1997.
31Patients Nonadherent to Statin Therapy Are Twice
as Likely to Experience Subsequent MI
Nonadherent
Adherent
P.047
P.001
P.73
4.1
4.1
4.0
3.5
2.1
1.5
Total
Patients lt65 Years
Patients 65 Years
Adherence defined as fill frequency 80 (n661).
Nonadherence defined as fill frequency 60
(n395).
Blackburn DF, et al. Pharmacotherapy.
2005251035-1043.
32As Adherence Goes Down, Health Care Costs and
Hospitalizations Go Up
1-19 Adherence Level
80-100 Adherence Level
100
Sokol MC, et al. Med Care. 200543521-530.
33The great statin debate -
Do they have magical
properties?
- Dr. Topol Do you believe that statins have
pleiotropic effects or magical properties? - Dr. Califf Absolutely
- Dr. Topol Do you think its related to
inflammatory markers, effect on endothelial
function, or some unique effect on the vascular
wall? - Dr. Califf Nope
- Dr. Topol Is it about early treatment, early
benefit or intensity? - Dr. Califf Nah
- Dr. Topol What then do you attribute the magic
of statins? - Dr. Califf When patients actually take them.
34UNC LIPID AND PREVENTION CLINIC
35Patient Knowledge of Coronary Risk
ProfileImproves the Effectiveness of
Dyslipidemia Therapy
24
Communicating risk is consistent with many of the
recommendations to improve adherence, including
enhancing self-monitoring and using the support
of family and friends. Informing patients of
their coronary risk may also increase the
effectiveness of primary prevention by
identifying individuals most likely to benefit
from treatment while reassuring those at low
risk.
21
18
15
High Risk
8-y Cardiovascular Risk,
12
Moderate Risk
9
6
3
Low Risk
0
Sep2002
Dec2002
Mar2003
Jun2003
Sep2003
Dec2003
Month
As a result of these changes, your cardiovascular
age has dropped from 60.8 y to 53.8 y. Your 8-y
cardiovascular risk has dropped from 24.5 to 7.5
Grover SA, et al. Arch Intern Med.
20071672296-2303.
36Misperception among physicians and patients
regarding the risks and benefits of statin
treatment the potential role of
direct-to-consumer advertisingRachel H. Kon, MD,
Mark W. Russo, MD, Bridget Ory, MD, Phil Mendys,
PharmD,Ross J. Simpson, Jr., MD, PhD
37Physician Follow-up/Provider Continuity
Associated With Long-term Adherence
Statin Therapy Start Date
Statin Therapy Restart Date
Statin Therapy Stop Date
No Statin Use in Past Year
Statin Rx 1
Statin Rx 2
Statin Rx 3
ControlPeriod
HazardPeriod
Statin Rx n 1
14 d
14 d
90-d Gap inStatin Coverage
- Statin use is dynamic many patients have long
periods of nonadherence - An estimated 48 restarted treatment within 1
year 60 restarted within 2 years - Continuity of care combined with increased
follow-up and cholesterol testing could promote
long-term adherence by shortening or eliminating
long gaps in statin use
Brookhart MA, et al. Arch Intern Med.
2007167847-852.
38Point-of-Care Lipid Testing
- Address gap in testing to treatment
- Improves option to titrate, adjust Rx
- Gets additional patient engagement
- Improves goal attainment
39Statin Titration and Goal AttainmentStart with
the end in mind!
14 of patients not at goal on initial dose
reached Goal by 6 months
At Goal on Starting Dose
48
2829 high risk patients
At Goal
(N203)
52
Titrated
Not At Goal
Not At Goal
(N1464)
NOT Titrated
(N448)
(N813)
AJC, Vol 92 July 1, 2003
40The relationship of vitamin D deficiency to
statin myopathy
- Both statins and vitamin D affect skeletal muscle
metabolism and function. There is preliminary
data to suggest that vitamin D deficiency is
associated with increased statin-associated
skeletal muscle complaints, but no definitive
evidence that vitamin D contributes to statin
myalgia or is effective in its treatment. Vitamin
D supplementation reduced myalgic symptoms in
some statin treated patients although a placebo
effect cannot be excluded. Consequently, it is
reasonable to determine vitamin D levels in
statin-myalgic patients and to provide vitamin D
supplementation in doses of 4002000 IU to those
with low vitamin D levels (lt32 ng/mL) until
definitive placebo controlled trials of this
therapy are available.
Atherosclerosis 215 (2011) 2329
41Cardiac rehabilitation
- The perfect fit to improve adherence
- Collaborative Team Approach
- Emphasis on Continuity of Care
- Multi-dimensional
- Systematic Process of Care delivery
42Patients' perspectives on cardiac rehabilitation,
lifestyle change and taking medicines
implications for service development
- Patients tended to talk about the exercise
component of cardiac rehabilitation and only talk
about the information provision component when
prompted, which suggested they viewed the program
as being primarily about exercise. - There was little subsequent contact with health
services, except routine six-monthly check-ups
for their coronary heart disease. - Unmet information needs were common, especially
about medicines - Ensuring that individual patients'
information needs about medicines and lifestyle
are adequately met remains a key focus for
cardiac rehabilitation development.
jhsrp.2009.009103v1 15/suppl_2/47
43The challenge of improving evidence-basedtherapy
adherence in the secondary prevention of coronary
artery disease the next frontier of cardiac
rehabilitation
- Non-adherence to prescribed drug regimens is an
increasing medical problem affecting physicians
and patients and contribute to negative outcomes,
such as the increased risk of subsequent
cardiovascular events. Analysis of various
patient populations shows that the choice of
drug, its tolerability and the duration of
treatment influence the non-adherence.
Intervention is required toward patients and
health-care providers to improve medication
adherence. This review deals about the prevalence
of non-adherence to therapy after medical and
surgical cardiac event, the risk factors
affecting non-adherence and the strategies to
implement it. Interventions that may successfully
improve adherence should include improved
physician compliance with guidelines, patient
education and patient reminders, frequent visits
or telephone calls from staff, simplification of
the patient's drug regimen by reducing the number
of pills and daily doses. Since single
interventions do not appear efficacious, it is
necessary to establish multiple interventions
simultaneously addressing a number of barriers to
adherence.
Monaldi Arch Chest Dis. 2009, reference in Italian
44Predictors of Smoking CessationAfter a
Myocardial Infarction
While individual smoking cessation counseling was
not associated with smoking cessation post-MI,
hospital-based smoking cessation programs, as
well as referral to cardiac rehabilitation, were
strongly associated with increased smoking
cessation rates.
Arch Intern Med. 2008168(18)1961-1967
45Long-term Medication Adherence after
MyocardialInfarction Experience of a Community
- CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
- ? More than 50 of the patients discontinue each
of the cardio-protective medications after a
myocardial infarction over a 3-year period. - ? Clinical characteristics of the myocardial
infarction were not associated with long-term
medication adherence. - ? Enrollment and use of cardiac rehab is
associated with better long-term medication
adherence.
The American Journal of Medicine (2009) 122,
961.e7-961.e12
46ACCF/AHA/AMAPCPI 2011 Performance Measures for
Adults With Coronary Artery Disease and
Hypertension
- 3.3.2. Medication Adherence
- objection to the use of patient adherence as a
measure of physician quality is that, although
prescribing physicians have some influence on
patient choices, adherence is largely not in the
individual physicians locus of control. - reliable information on patient adherence is
often difficult and expensive to obtain. - it believed that measures of adherence, such as
those included in HEDIS (Healthcare Effectiveness
Data and Information Set), could be used at the
health plan, employer, or health system levels as
effective quality improvement tools.
JACC Vol. 58, No. 3, 2011
47Adherence as a Health Care Priority
48Quiz
49The Framingham risk score estimates 10-year
absolute risk for cardiovascular disease events
and age contributes enormously to the end result,
given that indeed age is the greatest contributor
to absolute cardiovascular risk. However, the
Framingham Risk Score is less robust in the
elderly (age gt 70) as this group becauseA) the
likelihood of CV events decreases after age 70B)
have already had their age-based exposureC)
cholesterol management in this group appears to
provide no benefitD) the risk benefit ratio of
treating these patients limits treatment
considerationsE) none of the above
QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood
Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel
III) Full Report Final Report nih.gov
50The Framingham risk score estimates 10-year
absolute risk for cardiovascular disease events
and age contributes enormously to the end result,
given that indeed age is the greatest contributor
to absolute cardiovascular risk. However, the
Framingham Risk Score is less robust in the
elderly (age gt 70) as this group becauseA) the
likelihood of CV events decreases after age 70B)
have already had their age-based exposureC)
cholesterol management in this group appears to
provide no benefitD) the risk benefit ratio of
treating these patients limits treatment
considerationsE) none of the above
QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood
Cholesterol in Adults (Adult Treatment Panel
III) Full Report Final Report nih.gov
51QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- The National Cholesterol Education Panel ATP III
reaffirms their position that older persons who
are at coronary disease higher risk and are in
otherwise good health, are candidates for
cholesterol-lowering therapy. As reported in the
Cardiovascular Health Study in 2002, the use of
statin therapy in study participants at baseline
who were 65 years or older and free of
cardiovascular disease, resulted in a -
- A) Greater than 50 lower risk of CV events and
more than 40 lower all cause mortality. - B) Greater than 50 risk reduction for CV events,
but only 20 reduction in all cause death. - C) Equal reduction of risk in CV events and all
cause mortality - D) Reduction in risk of CV events, but an
increase of risk associated with adverse events
of statin therapy - E) None of the above
Therapy with hydroxylmethylglutaryl Coenzyme A
Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) and Associated
Risk of Incident Cardiovascular Events in Older
Adults evidence from he Cardiovascular Health
Study Rozen LeMaitre, PhD, MHS et.al. Arch IM
2002 162 1395-1400
52QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- The National Cholesterol Education Panel ATP III
reaffirms their position that older persons who
are at coronary disease higher risk and are in
otherwise good health, are candidates for
cholesterol-lowering therapy. As reported in the
Cardiovascular Health Study in 2002, the use of
statin therapy in study participants at baseline
who were 65 years or older and free of
cardiovascular disease, resulted in a -
- A) Greater than 50 lower risk of CV events and
more than 40 lower all cause mortality. - B) Greater than 50 risk reduction for CV events,
but only 20 reduction in all cause death. - C) Equal reduction of risk in CV events and all
cause mortality - D) Reduction in risk of CV events, but an
increase of risk associated with adverse events
of statin therapy - E) None of the above
Therapy with hydroxylmethylglutaryl Coenzyme A
Reductase Inhibitors (Statins) and Associated
Risk of Incident Cardiovascular Events in Older
Adults evidence from he Cardiovascular Health
Study Rozen LeMaitre, PhD, MHS et.al. Arch IM
2002 162 1395-1400
53QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- Persons greater than the age of 65 account for
approximately two out of three first major
coronary events, and CHD deaths account for about
½ of all CHD events. If we accept the premise
that statin therapy reduces risk for all CHD
event categories, then the likely mortality
benefit of statins is reasonably stated at - A) 40
- B) 33
- C) 70
- D) 50
- E) None of the above
Ref Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood
Cholesterol in Adults (Adult TreatmentPanel III)
Full Report Final Report nih.gov
54QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- Persons greater than the age of 65 account for
approximately two out of three first major
coronary events, and CHD deaths account for about
½ of all CHD events. If we accept the premise
that statin therapy reduces risk for all CHD
event categories, then the likely mortality
benefit of statins is reasonably stated at - A) 40
- B) 33
- C) 70
- D) 50
- E) None of the above
Ref Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood
Cholesterol in Adults (Adult TreatmentPanel III)
Full Report Final Report nih.gov
55QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- Choose the one best answer which addresses the
issues of Therapeutic Lifestyle in older
patients. - a) Weight reduction goals and increased physical
activity are less critical for patients over the
age of 65. - b) Patients should be encouraged to reduce intake
of saturated fats (7 of total calories) and
cholesterol (200 mg /day). This Step I diet is
then followed by a more restrictive Step II diet
to achieve more reasonable treatment goals - c) the clinician may consider drug therapy at a
period of 4 to 6 weeks in older patients who are
not approaching their respective treatment goal. - d) Plant stanols and soluble fiber should be
restricted in older patients due to the risk of
sever GI intolerance. - e) none of the above.
Lipid Management and the Elderly Mi Michael H.
Davidson, MD, Sara B. Kurlandsky, PhD, Ruth M.
Kleinpell, PhD, RN, Kevin C. Maki, PhD Prev
Cardiol 6(3)128-133, 2003
56QUESTIONS FOR LIPID MANAGEMENT IN THE ELDERLY
- Choose the one best answer which addresses the
issues of Therapeutic Lifestyle in older
patients. - a) Weight reduction goals and increased physical
activity are less critical for patients over the
age of 65. - b) Patients should be encouraged to reduce intake
of saturated fats (7 of total calories) and
cholesterol (200 mg /day). This Step I diet is
then followed by a more restrictive Step II diet
to achieve more reasonable treatment goals - c) the clinician may consider drug therapy at a
period of 4 to 6 weeks in older patients who are
not approaching their respective treatment goal. - d) Plant stanols and soluble fiber should be
restricted in older patients due to the risk of
sever GI intolerance. - e) none of the above.
Lipid Management and the Elderly Mi Michael H.
Davidson, MD, Sara B. Kurlandsky, PhD, Ruth M.
Kleinpell, PhD, RN, Kevin C. Maki, PhD Prev
Cardiol 6(3)128-133, 2003
57BACK UP SLIDES
58Poor health literacy a hidden risk factor
- Low health literacy has been associated with
non-adherence to treatment plans and medical
regimens, poor patient self-care, high healthcare
costs, and increased risk of hospitalization and
mortality. realizing that health literacy affects
prognosis affords the opportunity to better
understand the causes of poor outcome and develop
interventions to address this issue. Many
cardiovascular diseases have complex mechanisms
and etiologies and can be difficult for patients
to understand. low health literacy, therefore,
presents a particular challenge in treating the
cardiac patient.
nature reviews cardiology volume 7 Sept 2010
59Niacin in Patients with Low HDL Cholesterol
Levels Receiving Intensive Statin Therapy- AIM
HIGH
10.1056/nejmoa1107579 nejm.org/NEJM Nov 15, 2011
60Primary Outcome by Treatment Group and Baseline
Subgroup - ACCORD
The ACCORD Study Group. NEJM 2010
36217,1563-1574.
61Vitamin D deficiency, myositismyalgia, and
reversible statin intolerance
Current Medical Research Opinion Vol. 27, No.
9, 2011, 16831690
62Practical support predicts medication adherence
and attendance at cardiac rehabilitation
following acute coronary syndrome
Journal of Psychosomatic Research 65 (2008)
581586
63Erectile Dysfunction Risk Factors
64The problem is
- "Men with ED going to a general practitioner or a
urologist - need to be referred for a cardiology workup to
determine - existing cardiovascular disease and proper
treatment, - "ED is an early predictor of cardiovascular
disease." - Many men with ED see a general practitioner or a
urologist to - get medication for ED, he said.
- "The medication works and the patient doesn't
show up - anymore," "These men are being treated for the
ED, but not the underlying cardiovascular
disease. A whole segment of men is being placed
at risk.
Erectile Dysfunction Strong Predictor of Death,
Cardiovascular Outcomes ScienceDaily (Mar. 16,
2010)