Evidence that medication adherence can be improved in routine clinical practice is lacking.1 Despite its importance, relatively few rigorous intervention trials to promote adherence have been undertaken.1 Rigorous randomised controlled trials of adequate size are required to detect clinically important benefits from interventions applicable to clinical practice, particularly in primary care where the majority of prescribing for chronic conditions occurs. Previous randomised controlled trials have usually been small and evaluated complex interventions that are not easily transferable into routine clinical practice.1
The greatest potential for improving medication adherence may lie in the widespread implementation of brief interventions that motivate large numbers of people to increase their medication adherence by small amounts,5,6 rather than by intensive intervention focused on a small number of extremely non-adherent individuals.5,6 The widespread use of clinical computer systems in primary care means that it is already feasible to target health education materials at patients with specific conditions.5 Such educational interventions, however, need to take account of the lay health beliefs that individuals with chronic conditions hold about their medicines.7
How this fits in
The practice of not adhering to self-administered medication for chronic conditions is extremely common. Depending on the efficacy of treatment and the level of non-adherence, it undermines the benefits of medical therapy. Several small clinical trials have suggested that printed materials can influence adherence. Provision of an educational booklet to patients with primary hypothyroidism had no influence on their thyroxine adherence or health. The evidence that medication adherence can be improved within routine clinical practice remains limited.
Our objective was to determine if patients prescribed thyroxine for primary hypothyroidism benefit from receiving an educational booklet addressing lay health beliefs about medicine taking in comparison with usual care.