Department of Pharmacy Practice, Auburn University Harrison School of Pharmacy, 1202F Walker Building, Auburn, AL, USA.
Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Outcomes Sciences, University of South Carolina College of Pharmacy, 715 Sumter St, CLS 311E, Columbia, SC, USA.
Res Social Adm Pharm. 2021 Oct;17(10):1800-1809. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2021.01.018. Epub 2021 Feb 5.
Medication adherence for chronic conditions continues to be a challenge for patients. Patient incentives for medication adherence may help. Financial incentives delivered at the point of care may act as cues for medication-taking behavior.
The purpose of this study was to investigate patient preferences for specific structures of financial medication adherence incentives that could feasibly be delivered at the point of care.
A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was performed using a national online survey. Study participants were adults who self-reported taking at least one prescription medication for one or more chronic conditions. Following an orthogonal design generated in SAS, the DCE included 32 paired-choice tasks. Data were analyzed using mixed logit models and stratified on participants' income level.
In the full cohort (n = 933), form of financial reward (such as gift-card or cash) was 1.02 times as important to participants as the probability of incentive receipt, 1.58 times as important as monetary value, and 1.93 times as important as timing of receipt. Participants were willing to give up $31.04 of an incentive's monetary value (95% CI = $27.11-$34.98) to receive the incentive 5 months sooner (1-month vs. 6-month time-lag); $60.79 (95% CI = $53.19-$68.39) for probability of receipt to increase from a 1 out of 100 chance to a 1 out of 20 chance; and $10.52 (95% CI = $6.46-$14.58) to receive an incentive in the form of a Visa® gift-card instead of grocery store voucher. These patterns of trade-offs between attributes were generally consistent among participants with lower and higher income.
Regardless of socioeconomic status, patient preferences for financial medication adherence incentives delivered at the point of care may be most heavily influenced by incentive form and probability of receipt. This has implications for designing medication adherence programs in terms of incentive sustainability, patient engagement, plan star ratings, and patient outcomes.
慢性病患者的药物依从性仍然是一个挑战。患者药物依从性的激励措施可能会有所帮助。在护理点提供经济激励措施可以作为药物服用行为的提示。
本研究旨在调查患者对在护理点提供的具体经济药物依从性激励措施结构的偏好,这些措施在实施上具有可行性。
使用全国在线调查进行离散选择实验(DCE)。研究参与者为自我报告至少服用一种用于一种或多种慢性病的处方药的成年人。根据在 SAS 中生成的正交设计,DCE 包括 32 对配对选择任务。使用混合对数模型分析数据,并按参与者的收入水平进行分层。
在整个队列(n=933)中,经济奖励形式(如礼品卡或现金)对参与者的重要性是激励措施获得概率的 1.02 倍,是货币价值的 1.58 倍,是获得时间的 1.93 倍。参与者愿意放弃激励措施货币价值的 31.04 美元(95%CI=27.11-34.98),以提前 5 个月获得激励(1 个月与 6 个月的时间滞后);愿意放弃 60.79 美元(95%CI=53.19-68.39),以将获得概率从 1/100 提高到 1/20;愿意放弃 10.52 美元(95%CI=6.46-14.58),以获得维萨(Visa)礼品卡形式的激励,而不是杂货店代金券。这些属性之间的权衡取舍模式在收入较低和较高的参与者中基本一致。
无论社会经济地位如何,患者对在护理点提供的经济药物依从性激励措施的偏好可能主要受激励措施形式和获得概率的影响。这对设计药物依从性计划的激励措施可持续性、患者参与度、计划星级评分和患者结果具有重要意义。