How to achieve good compliance and adherence with inhalation therapy

2005 
ABSTRACTThe correct use of inhaler devices is an inclusion criterion for all studies comparing inhaled treatments. However, in real life patients make many errors when inhaling their medication which may negate the benefits observed in clinical trials. A recently published observational study evaluated inhaler handling in 3811 patients for at least 1 month using the Aerolizer, Autohaler, Diskus, pressurised metered dose inhaler (pMDI) or Turbuhaler devices. Inhalation errors were considered critical if they could have substantially affected drug delivery to the lung. The two most common errors made by patients were device-independent errors and included not breathing out before actuation of the device (28.9%) and failure to breath-hold for a few seconds after inhalation (28.3%). These errors were observed in 40%–47% of patients. The number of patients making at least one error with breath-actuated inhalers was high; with less than 50% of patients inhaling correctly. Seventy-six per cent of patients made a...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    7
    References
    41
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map