Abstract
Objective:
To examine the effect of a device specifically designed to improve patient medication compliance. This device, the Counter Cap (CC), is a prescription vial closure that mechanically indicates when the bottle was last opened, presumably to take a dose of medication. The primary objective was to assess the effect of the CC on patient compliance as measured by refill behavior.
Method:
An experimental pretest-posttest control group design was used to study the effect of the CC on patient compliance. A systematic sampling technique was used to assign subjects to the experimental and control groups. Patient compliance was assessed through prescription refill behaviors measured over a six-month period (three months pre-CC and three months post-CC).
Results:
A full six months of prescription refill data were analyzed for 186 of 337 patients from 21 pharmacies. Patients in the experimental group (n = 88) demonstrated significantly improved (F = 4.44, p = 0.0366) medication compliance and less variability in the number of days of departure from the ideal compliance rate (F = 6.89, p = 0.009) over the control group (n = 98) as measured by refill behavior.
Conclusions:
The CC proved to be an inexpensive means to improve medication compliance as defined by this investigation.
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