News

A quarter of hypertensive Medicare enrollees are nonadherent


 

FROM MMWR

References

Over 26% of Medicare part D enrollees aged 65 years and over are not taking their antihypertensive drugs properly, according to a report published online Sept. 13 in MMWR.

An analysis of 2014 data showed that 4.9 million hypertensive Medicare patients were taking an incorrect dose of their medication or were not taking it at all, reported Matthew Ritchey, DPT of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s division for heart disease and stroke prevention, and his associates (MMWR. 2016 Sep 13:65).

Nonadherence rates varied considerably by race and ethnicity, with American Indians/Alaska Natives the highest at 39%, followed by blacks at 36%, Hispanics at 34%, Asian/Pacific Islanders at 26%, and white non-Hispanics at 24%, the investigators noted.

The analysis included 18.5 million part D beneficiaries who filled two or more antihypertensive prescriptions in the same therapeutic class on different dates within a period of more than 90 days in 2014.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

High free T4 levels linked to sudden cardiac death
MDedge Family Medicine
Clot retrieval devices approved for initial ischemic stroke treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
The new NOACs are generally the best bet
MDedge Family Medicine
Trials offer lessons despite negative primary endpoints
MDedge Family Medicine
Ticagrelor slashes first stroke risk after MI
MDedge Family Medicine
Smoking thickens LV wall, worsens function
MDedge Family Medicine
Lowering LDL-C yields usual benefits in rheumatoid arthritis
MDedge Family Medicine
First-generation DES looking good at 10 years
MDedge Family Medicine
Four-step screen IDs silent heart attack in type 2 diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Four factors raise risk of post-TAVR endocarditis
MDedge Family Medicine