Kd. Burney et al., ADHERENCE TO SINGLE DAILY DOSE OF ASPIRIN IN A CHEMOPREVENTION TRIAL - AN EVALUATION OF SELF-REPORT AND MICROELECTRONIC MONITORING, Archives of family medicine, 5(5), 1996, pp. 297-300
A consecutive sample of 64 healthy adults (33 female and 31 male) were
recruited at the University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor. Da
ta were available for analysis on 57 subjects. The participants were a
sked to take a single daily dose of aspirin ranging from 0 to 640 mg.
Adherence to the daily aspirin ingestion was measured by self-report a
nd the Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS, Aprex Corp, Fremont,
Calif); adherence rate for the study population was 35%. The adherence
rates for all dosing errors between self-report and Medication Event
Monitoring System were significantly different (P=.002). There was no
significant gender difference in adherence rates. Adherence to regular
aspirin ingestion was poor in healthy, paid subjects despite explicit
, written and verbal instructions. Patient self-report alone is not a
reliable measure of adherence.