# The Impact of Home Medication Management Practices on Medication Adherence

**Authors:** Lisa Gualtieri, Meredith Steinfeldt, Eden Shaveet, Brandon Estime, Meera Singhal

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs14090804 · 2024-09-11

## TL;DR

This study explores how where people store medications at home affects their likelihood of forgetting doses, aiming to improve adherence through better guidance.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific home storage locations linked to medication adherence and suggests personalized guidance from healthcare providers.

## Key findings

- Nightstand drawers and desks are associated with lower odds of forgetting medication doses.
- Storing medications in kitchen cabinets or bathroom medicine cabinets increases the likelihood of forgetting doses.
- Most patients are open to receiving guidance on medication storage from healthcare providers.

## Abstract

Medication adherence is a vexing challenge, with over 50% of US adults not adhering to their prescribed medication regimen. Most medications are self-administered by patients at home, requiring them to independently develop and manage their own medication routines. By understanding these home-based practices, such as where patients store their medications and how different storage locations impact adherence, we can develop targeted interventions to improve adherence rates. Our goal was to identify and categorize self-reported home medication management practices and determine which practices are associated with self-reported medication adherence. From the 1673 total survey respondents we learned that the most common places people store their medications at home are nightstand drawers (28%), on top of nightstands (27%), kitchen cabinets (22%), and bathroom medicine cabinets (20%). Kitchen cabinets and bathroom vanities were significantly associated with increased odds of having ever forgotten to take a medication. On the other hand, desks, dining room tables, and the inside of nightstand drawers were associated with the greatest statistically significant decrease in odds of having ever forgotten to take a medication. Almost all (96%) respondents were receptive to receiving guidance from healthcare providers on how to store medications. Patients are largely responsible for creating their own home medication management practices, including deciding where to store their medication at home. Understanding which home storage locations are associated with medication adherence can lead to innovative approaches to improve adherence, including personalized guidance to patients from their healthcare providers for patients.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11428923