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Psychiatric Bulletin (2007) 31: 193. doi: 10.1192/pb.31.5.193
© 2007 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
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Correspondence

Incentives for medication adherence

Guy Molyneux, Specialist Registrar in Psychiatry

Psychiatric Unit, Adelaide Meath National Children’s Hospital, Dublin 24, email: guymoly{at}gmail.com

Patrick Devitt, Consultant Psychiatrist

Adelaide Meath National Children’s Hospital, Dublin

As members of an assertive outreach team covering a socially deprived area of south-west Dublin, we read with interest the paper on money for medication by Claassen et al (Psychiatric Bulletin, January 2007, 31, 4-7) and congratulate the authors for applying contingency management measures, which are useful in other areas of medicine, in such an innovative, pragmatic way. Our team has not used financial incentives but has used other incentives to improve adherence to depot antipsychotics in a number of patients with severe illness and a high rate of hospitalisation. The incentives were negotiated with the patient and involved judicious and appropriate prescription of low doses of medications requested by the patient (such as low-dose hypnotics).

We discerned that the key ethical issues were undue influence and imbalance of power. We accept Claassen et al’s differentiation of offer and threat, although we should point out that when a patient is taking medication for payment, an implicit threat exists in that failure to continue results in a loss for the patient. However, against a background of several hospitalisations associated with serious reduction in quality of life because of nonadherence to effective medications, it does appear reasonable and ethical to regard the benefits to the patient of adherence as overcoming such negative factors as imperfect consent. We would counsel that such arrangements be subject to external review and monitoring.





This Article
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Right arrow Articles by Devitt, P.


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