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. 2020 May 8;2020(5):CD012419. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012419.pub2

Cargill 1992.

Study characteristics
Methods Aim of study: to provide information on identification of patients at highest risk for problems related to medication non‐compliance and problematic behaviours in the home setting and their response to teaching interventions; to optimise medication‐taking compliance of elderly patients by strengthening the home medication administration system; to reinforce the nursing role as facilitator of maximum health status
Study design: RCT (unit of allocation: individual)
Number of arms/groups: 3
Participants Description: both patient/consumer and carer
Geographic location: USA
Setting: outpatient clinic (general medicine servicing Veterans Administration)
Inclusion criteria: ≥ 60 years, metropolitan area accessible to home visits
Number of participants randomised: 70
Number of participants included in analysis: 70
Age: range 62 to 97 years, mean 72
Gender: not specified
Ethnicity: not specified
Number of medications: prescription, non‐topical, non‐inhalant, non‐liquid; mean: 7.5
Frailty/Functional impairment: not specified
Cognitive impairment: not specified
Comorbidities: not specified
Interventions Group 2Nurse teaching session: 20‐minute teaching session, including review of medications timed to patient's schedule and any allowed flexibility. A pill cassette was dispensed if feasible for the patient
Group 3Nurse teaching session and follow‐up phone call: 20‐minute teaching session (as above) plus additional follow‐up telephone call 1 to 2 weeks after visit in which the nurse reviewed the medication regimen verbally with the patient
Group 1‐ Usual care
Co‐intervention: N/A
Provider: nurse
Where: home ± phone call (group 3)
When and how often: once (+ follow‐up at 1 to 2 weeks in group 3)
Intervention personalised: personalised review of medications was timed to patient's schedule; pill cassette was dispensed if feasible
Outcomes Timing of outcome assessment: baseline, 4 to 6 weeks
Medication adherence (objective): pill count percentage compliance. Percentage of pills taken vs those prescribed to be taken using pill count
Medication taking ability (objective): behaviour score/100 for congruency between supply of medications on hand and prescribed medications (/40), verbalising correct regimen (/30), maintaining each prescribed med (/20), appropriate use of OTC (/10). Points deducted for sequestering old scripts, using alternative medications inappropriately, or mixing medications together
Notes Trial registration: N/A
Consumer involvement: not specified
Funding source: not specified
Dropout: N/A
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Unclear risk Not specified
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Unclear risk Not specified
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias)
All outcomes High risk No mention of blinding; assume patients and nurses knew allocation to perform intervention
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias)
All outcomes Unclear risk No mention of blinding
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
All outcomes Low risk No mention of attrition
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Unclear risk Raw data not reported; only in graph format
Other bias Low risk None apparent