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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Feb 3.
Published in final edited form as: Pediatr Pulmonol. 2014 Mar 10;50(2):127–136. doi: 10.1002/ppul.23017

Table 3. Facilitators of Adherence.

Recognizing the importance of therapies
  • Becoming knowledgeable about taking medications and their purpose, as well as other aspects of their care

  • Accepting responsibility for one's health and CF care

Relationships with the CF care team
  • Having a trusting relationship with the CF doctor and team,

  • Encouraging the CF physician to talk frankly to the adolescent and reinforce the importance of adherence to the medication and treatment regimen

  • CF team should provide “tools” and tips to assist the adolescent in maintaining adherence

  • CF team should be creative in problem-solving with the adolescent and parent

Being treated as an adult
  • Openness about CF with others to offer opportunities for support

  • Enabling parents to cede control and entrust responsibility to adolescents

  • Allowing adolescents to experience the negative consequences to their health of non-adherence in order to increase the likelihood of future adherence to treatments

Early development of self-care skills through repeated practice
  • Completing treatments consistently from an early age (“always have done it”)

  • Gradually increasing responsibility given to the child for self-care

  • “The sooner he/she knows how to do it, the sooner it becomes second nature.”

Establishing a structure
  • Having a regular, predictable schedule

  • Having a daily routine, “making it a ritual”

  • Learning to multitask, for example, do homework, video games, etc. while doing CPT