Health Economics and Policy, Vienna University of Business and Economics, Welthandelsplatz 1, Building D4, 1020, Vienna, Austria.
Health Services & Systems Research Program, Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore, Singapore.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2019 Dec;17(6):841-855. doi: 10.1007/s40258-019-00497-0.
Poor adherence to medications is a global public health concern with substantial health and cost implications, especially for chronic conditions. In the USA, poor adherence is estimated to cause 125,000 deaths and cost $US100 billion annually. The most successful adherence-promoting strategies that have been identified so far have moderate effect, are relatively costly, and raise availability, feasibility, and/or scalability issues.
The main objective of SIGMA (Study on Incentives for Glaucoma Medication Adherence) was to measure the effectiveness on medication adherence of a novel incentive strategy based on behavioral economics that we refer to as adherence-contingent rebates. These rebates offered patients a near-term benefit while leveraging loss aversion and regret and increasing the salience of adherence.
SIGMA is a 6-month randomized, controlled, open-label, single-center superiority trial with two parallel arms. A total of 100 non-adherent glaucoma patients from the Singapore National Eye Centre were randomized into intervention (adherence-contingent rebates) and usual care (no rebates) arms in a 1:1 ratio. The primary outcome was the mean change from baseline in percentage of adherent days at Month 6. The trial registration number is NCT02271269 and a detailed study protocol has been published elsewhere.
We found that participants who were offered adherence-contingent rebates were adherent to all their medications on 73.1% of the days after 6 months, which is 12.2 percentage points (p = 0.027) higher than in those not receiving the rebates after controlling for baseline differences. This better behavioral outcome was achieved by rebates averaging 8.07 Singapore dollars ($US5.94 as of 2 November 2017) per month during the intervention period.
This study shows that simultaneously leveraging several insights from behavioral economics can significantly improve medication adherence rates. The relatively low cost of the rebates and significant health and cost implications of medication non-adherence suggest that this strategy has the potential to cost-effectively improve health outcomes for many conditions.
药物依从性差是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,会对健康和成本产生重大影响,尤其是在慢性病方面。据估计,在美国,药物依从性差每年导致 125000 人死亡,耗费 1000 亿美元。迄今为止,最成功的促进药物依从性的策略效果适中,成本相对较高,并且存在可用性、可行性和/或可扩展性问题。
SIGMA(青光眼药物依从性激励研究)的主要目的是衡量一种基于行为经济学的新型激励策略(我们称之为依从性相关回扣)对药物依从性的有效性。这些回扣为患者提供了近期利益,同时利用了损失厌恶和遗憾心理,并提高了对依从性的重视。
SIGMA 是一项为期 6 个月的随机、对照、开放标签、单中心优效性试验,分为两个平行组。共纳入新加坡国家眼科中心的 100 名非依从性青光眼患者,按 1:1 的比例随机分为干预组(依从性相关回扣)和对照组(无回扣)。主要结局是第 6 个月时依从性天数的百分比变化。试验注册号为 NCT02271269,详细的研究方案已在其他地方发表。
我们发现,接受依从性相关回扣的参与者在 6 个月后,其所有药物的依从性天数为 73.1%,与未接受回扣的参与者相比,这一比例提高了 12.2 个百分点(p=0.027)。在控制了基线差异后,这种更好的行为结果是通过每月平均 8.07 新加坡元(截至 2017 年 11 月 2 日,约合 5.94 美元)的回扣实现的。
这项研究表明,同时利用行为经济学的几个观点可以显著提高药物依从率。回扣的成本相对较低,而药物不依从对健康和成本的影响重大,这表明这种策略有可能以具有成本效益的方式改善许多疾病的健康结果。