Abstract

BackgroundDue to high prevalence, non-adherence to prescribed treatment seriously undermines the effectiveness of evidence-based therapies in paediatric patients. In order to change this negative scenario, physicians need to be aware of adherence problem, as well as of possible solutions. Unfortunately, full potential of adherence-targeting interventions is still underused in Poland. Therefore, the aim of this study was to assess the knowledge, attitudes and behaviours toward non-adherence in Polish paediatricians.MethodsAn anonymous cross-sectional nationwide survey was conducted in the convenience sample of Polish doctors providing care to paediatric patients. The survey focused on the prevalence of non-adherence, its causes, and interventions employed. Primary studied parameter was perceived prevalence of non-adherence in paediatric patients. Reporting of this study adheres to STROBE guidelines.ResultsOne thousand and thirty-three responses were eligible for analysis. Vast majority of respondents were female (85.9%), most of them worked in primary care (90.6%). The respondents represented all 16 Polish Voivodeships, with the biggest number coming from the Mazowieckie Voivodeship (n = 144, 13.9%). Survey participants believed that on average 28.9% of paediatric patients were non-adherent to medication. More than half of the respondents (n = 548, 53.0%) were convinced that their own patients were more adherent than average. Duration of the professional practice strongly correlated with a lower perceived prevalence of non-adherence. Professionals with more than 40 years of practice believed that the percentage of non-adherent patients was <=20% particularly often (OR = 3.82 (95% CI 2.11–6.93) versus those up to 10 years in practice). Out of all respondents, they were also most often convinced that their own patients were more adherent than the general population (P < 0.01). Consequently, they underestimated the need for training in this area.ConclusionsPhysicians taking care of Polish paediatric patients underestimated the prevalence of medication non-adherence and believed that this was a problem of other doctors. This optimistic bias was particularly pronounced in older doctors. These results identify important barriers toward improving patient adherence that are worth addressing in the pre- and post-graduate education of Polish physicians. They also put some light over the challenges that educational activities in this area may face.

Highlights

  • Due to high prevalence, non-adherence to prescribed treatment seriously undermines the effectiveness of evidence-based therapies in paediatric patients

  • The study was conducted as a self-administered crosssectional nationwide survey in the Polish physicians providing care to paediatric patients

  • This study proved that Polish physicians active in the field of child health were aware of the problem of non-adherence, but they seriously underestimated the actual prevalence of this phenomenon

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Summary

Introduction

Non-adherence to prescribed treatment seriously undermines the effectiveness of evidence-based therapies in paediatric patients. Due to its widespread prevalence and serious consequences, WHO considers this phenomenon to be a “global problem of striking magnitude” [2]. As it has been observed many times, in the case of chronic diseases, at least 50% of patients do not use therapy in accordance with the instructions received from healthcare professionals. An international survey conducted in several European countries proved non-adherence to long-term treatment to be more prevalent in Poland than in all studied West European countries [3]. In a study involving over 63,000 Polish patients, non-adherence was found to be present in as many as 83.8% of them [4]

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