Does reducing the number of daily doses improve adherence to blood pressure-lowering medication in ambulatory care?
Reducing the number of daily doses of antihypertensive medication is an effective first-line strategy to improve patient adherence.
Reducing the number of daily doses appears to be effective in increasing adherence to blood pressure-lowering medication and should be tried as a first-line strategy, although there is so far less evidence of an effect on blood pressure reduction. Some motivational strategies and complex interventions appear promising, but we need more evidence on their effect through carefully designed randomized controlled trials.
Schroeder et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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