Medication Compliance in the Elderly

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      Furthermore, patients tend to be dishonest and ashamed to admit their non-adherence since it is not socially accepted. Moreover, the patients' desire to avoid being reprimanded for non-adherence to the immunosuppressant therapy could result in response bias in the self-reports.19 Thus, it can be assumed that the non-adherent result from the two “controllable” questions may not have a strong influence on the actual medication adherence resulting from the regimen conversion.

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      Multiple factors have been shown to underlie medication nonadherence, with patient knowledge being a key determinant.1 Patient understanding of directions for prescribed medications is an essential prerequisite for adherence.2,3 Studies have shown an association between lower levels of health literacy and less medication knowledge and adherence.4–7

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