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  1. com·pli·ance. (kŏm-plī'ăns) 1. A measure of the distensibility of a chamber expressed as a change in volume per unit change in pressure. 2. The consistency and accuracy with which a patient follows the regimen prescribed by a physician or other health care professional. Compare: adherence (2) , maintenance.

    • Dictionary

      com·pli·ance (kəm-plī′əns) n. 1. a. The act of complying...

  2. The terms compliance and adherence are interchangeable among healthcare practitioners, but there are numerous differences between the two terms. Adherence involves patients actively choosing to follow the prescribed treatments as they are responsible for their own health, whereas compliance usually indicates passive actions whereby the patients follow a list of orders from the physician.

    • Executive Summary
    • Aconceptualmapandresearchagenda
    • Terminology–compliance,adherence andconcordance
    • Terminology recommendations
    • Determinantsofmedication-taking behaviour
    • Theme 1: Explaining medication-taking behaviour
    • Theme 2: Patient-provider interactions and communication in healthcare
    • Theme 3: Societal policies and practice
    • Doing the right thing: the normative theme
    • Theme 4: Interventions to facilitate adherence
    • Conclusions and Recommendation
    • Mappingresearchquestionsontothe SDOresearchpriorities
    • Patient choice 7
    • Adherence in vulnerable groups
    • Disclaimer

    RobHorne,JohnWeinman,NickBarber,RachelElliott, MyfanwyMorgan,AlanCribb&IanKellar Thisreportisaproductofascopingexercisecommissioned bytheNHSNationalCoordinatingCentreforService DeliveryandOrganisation(NCCSDO)withthefollowing aims: Summarisecurrentknowledgeaboutthedeterminants ofmedication-taking. Constructaconceptualmapoftheareaofcompliance, adhere...

    Thesizeandscopeoftheliteratureonmedication-taking canmakeitdifficultforpractitionerstofindtheirway around.Thecomplexityofthetopicisillustratedbythefact thatthereareatleastthreetermsincommonusage: compliance,adherenceandconcordance. Thisdocumentdoesnotinvolveanexhaustivereviewofthe primaryliterature–thishasalreadybeenresearchedto goodeffectandisbeyo...

    Complianceisdefinedas:‘Theextenttowhichthepatient’s behaviourmatchestheprescriber’srecommendations.’ However,itsuseisdecliningasitimplieslackofpatient involvement. Adherenceisdefinedas:‘Theextenttowhichthepatient’s behaviourmatchesagreedrecommendationsfromthe prescriber.’Ithasbeenadoptedbymanyasanalternative tocompliance,inanattempttoemphasisethatt...

    Werecognisedthatthesethreetermsarenowused interchangeablyandthatthishasgeneratedsomeconfusion. AfterdiscussionwithintheProjectteamandwithourExpert PanelandConsultationGroups,werecommend‘adherence’ asthetermofchoicetodescribepatients’medicinetaking behaviour. Werecognisethatadherenceisnotalwaysa‘goodthing’as aprescriptionmaybeinappropriateornotrefle...

    Wegroupedtheliteratureonadherenceintofourcore themes:explainingpatientbehaviour:patient-provider interactions;societalpolicyandpractice;andinterventions. Theseareunderpinnedbycomplexnotionsofthevarious, andsometimesconflicting,thingsweconsidertobe‘good’ aboutprescribingandmedicinetaking.Wepausetoexplore theseissuesinbetweenthepolicyandinterventiont...

    Theresearchevidenceshowsthatvariationinadherence cannotbeexplainedbyarangeoffixedfactors,suchasthe typeorseverityofdisease;sociodemographicvariablesor personalitytraits.Adherenceispositivelycorrelatedwith incomewhenthepatientispayingfortreatmentbutnotwith generalsocio-economicstatus.Furthermore,providingclear information,althoughessential,isnotenou...

    Ourreviewoftheempiricalevidenceidentifiedsurprisingly fewstudiesthatsystematicallyevaluatethedirecteffectsof theprescribingconsultationonmedicationadherence behaviour.Furtherbasicresearchisneededtoclarifythe effectsoftheconsultationonmedicationadherence,the extenttowhichconsultationskillstrainingcanimprove adherence,andhowdifferentmessagesfromdiffe...

    Theimpactofnonadherenceatasocietallevelisprobably substantial,butexistingdataintheUKaretoopoortofully characterisethis,possiblybecause,untilrecently,the managementofadherencehasnotfeaturedstronglyinNHS policy.However,severalcorepolicyinitiativessuchasthe ExpertPatientprogramme,NationalServiceFrameworksand MedicinesUseReviews(MURs)nowplacepatientsel...

    Underpinningthiswholereportaretwoquestions–whatis goodprescribingandwhatisgoodmedicinetaking?These questions,incontrasttoquestionsofeffectiveness,have hadlittleindepthexplorationintheliterature,yettheymust beaddressedtoinformpoliciesandpractices.Wefound thesequestionstoberelevantacrosseachofourfour themesanddevotedaseparatechapterofthereport (Chapt...

    Theliteratureonadherenceinterventionshasbeenthe subjectofthreemajorsystematicreviewsoverthepastfive years,culminatinginaCochranesystematicreviewin2002. Aspartofourscopingexerciseweextendedthescopeofthe Cochranereviewbyincludingstudiesthatmetthestringent qualitycriteria,butwerenoteligibleforinclusioninthe Cochranereviewbecausetheyhadmeasuredadherenc...

    Theevidencefromthisandpreviousreviewsisthat nonadherencetoappropriatelyprescribedmedicinesisa globalhealthproblemofmajorrelevancetotheNHS. Currentlevelsofnonadherenceimplyafailureto addresspatients’needsandpreferencesandrepresent afundamentalinefficiencyinthedeliveryand organisationoftheNHS.Nonadherenceprevents patientsfromgainingaccesstothebesttre...

    KeyresearchquestionsmappedontoSDOresearchpriority areas

    Inwhatwayscanandshouldpatients’initialchoices andpreferencesbemodified? Inwhatwaysandunderwhatcircumstancesshould patientchoiceformthebasisfordecisionmakingin prescribingandmedicine-taking? Whataremosteffectivewaysofrepresentingevidence forthelikelybenefitsandrisksofmedication? Howcanwetailormedicinesinformationtomatchthe requirementsofindividualpa...

    Considerationofvulnerablegroupscutsacrossthe explanatorythemesandisrelevantformostresearch questions,regardlessofwhetherresearchistargetedat explainingindividualbehaviour,investigatingcommunication inhealthcare,societalpolicyandpracticeorevaluating interventions.Workinthisarearequiressystematicreviews oftheavailableliteraturefollowedbyempiricalstud...

    ✪ This report presents independent research commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). The views and opinions expressed therein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the NHS, the NIHR, the SDO programme or the Department of Health

  3. Jun 4, 2024 · Defining patient compliance. Patient compliance is described as a patient’s level of adherence to a given diet or treatment, as well as whether the patient returns for follow-up, re-examination, or further treatment. In addition, patient compliance requires candor and honesty while communicating with a healthcare practitioner, so that the ...

  4. Mar 8, 1997 · At long last the “compliance problem” may be getting a new name and, with it, a new view of the patient's role in the doctor-patient relationship. A report published this week by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain's working party on medicine taking recommends that “concordance” should replace the term “compliance.”1 Although substitute terms have been suggested and ...

    • Patricia Dolan Mullen
    • 1997
  5. Patient compliance with regimens may be one of the most studied and least understood behavioral issues in medicine. Medical compliance was defined in the late 1970s as “the extent to which the patient’s behavior (in terms of taking medications, following diets, or executing other lifestyle changes) coincides with medical or health advice ...

  6. Oct 31, 2018 · Therapeutic compliance is the patient’s behaviors (in terms of taking medicines, following diets, or executing lifestyle changes) that coincides with the health care provider’s recommendations for health and medical advice. Ji J, Sklar GE, Min Sen Oh V, and Li SC. Factors Affecting Therapeutic Compliance: A review from patient’s perspective.

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