What Is The Technological Future Of Medication Management?

What Is The Technological Future Of Medication Management?

When a patient heads to a healthcare institution and is prescribed medicines, one might expect them to stick to the regimen to improve their health. However, up to 50% of patients fail to adhere to their medications as prescribed.?

And around the world, millions are taking medicines. In the U.K., over 26% of adults take prescription medications. Across the Atlantic ocean, in the U.S., some 66% of the adult population take prescription drugs. Down in the South Hemisphere, around 35% of Australians take such medicine on a daily basis.?

With those millions of medicine-taking people comes the inevitable risk of medication errors. In England alone, researchers found that over 237 million medication errors are made every year.

Ultimately, these add up to the losses incurred both financially and, more importantly, in terms of patient lives. One way to tackle these issues is through medication management. The UK’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) defines medicine management as “the clinical, cost-effective and safe use of medicines to ensure patients get the maximum benefit from the medicines they need, while at the same time minimising potential harm”.

However, the methods employed have been stagnant for long and still leave room for improvements, as the numbers show. As healthcare steadily pivots towards digital health, what future do the relevant, novel technologies paint for medication management? Stick with us as this is what we will explore in this article.

Medication management, compliance and the empowered patient

When it comes to medication management, there are two key sides: the administrative (clinician/pharmacist) and the patient side. This means that issues can sprout from either end of the spectrum and at every stage of the process from prescribing to dispensing. Considering recent statistics from the U.K. alone, medication errors cost the NHS around £98 million and over 1700 lives every year; and researchers consider these losses as “definitely avoidable”. On a global scale, it’s easy to project the magnitude to be severalfold .?

This represents a significant burden that is preventable but that novel technologies in the digital health era can help address. However, the same era is defined by the empowered patient . Equipped with digital health tools, having access to their own health data and engaged in online patient communities, the latter are more proactive in managing their care. As such, being tasked to comply with their treatment regimen in the traditional, passive way is an obsolete, if not offensive, approach for the empowered patient.

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The patient of the digital health age would rather be more proactive in this process. Engaging them in medication management can thankfully be made possible through digital health approaches and we’ll consider those in the next section.

Medication management in the digital health age

With the accessibility of connected devices and remote care, patients and their physicians can share a new dynamic to manage medication. Physicians can prescribe digital health tools to assist patients in managing their medications while also enabling them to monitor adherence. For their part, patients can turn to their doctors remotely in case of concerns. Below are 5 digital health tools that could improve medication management and enable this new dynamic.

1. Smart pill dispensers

Digitally enabled pill dispensers like the Hero Automatic Medication Dispenser and MedaCube deliver audible and visual cues to remind patients to take their medications at the right time and dose. Caregivers and physicians can even track adherence through the companion app.


2. Medication reminder apps

For a software-based option, patients can adopt apps like CareZone and Medisafe . These help manage medication regimens and can sync the data with a caregiver or doctor. With this approach, they can be notified when refills are needed or when the patient doesn’t respond to several missed dosage alerts.

3. Digital therapeutics

Other types of software also hold promise in the future of medication management, in particular digital therapeutics (DTx). These evidence-based, clinically evaluated software undergo regulatory oversight to ensure their safe and effective use as well as their clinical impact.?

One such DTx product is Insula , a prescription-only software that assists type 2 diabetics to manage their condition. It recommends patients personalised insulin doses as well as acts as a coach in managing their diabetes.

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4. Digital pills

The longer-term goal would be to integrate a tracking option in pills themselves, and this is where digital pills come into play. While adoption is still in the early stages, some companies are working on drugs with ingestible electronics for adherence monitoring purposes. Of note, not all drugs will bear the same technology; as digital pills are more appropriate in niche areas where compliance can and should be improved with this tech. For example, patients with severe mental health conditions or the elderly having challenges adhering to their medications can benefit more from digital pills.?

etectRx’s FDA-approved digital pill gives patients more control over when monitoring starts. It involves a removable lanyard rather than a patch, which patients can remove after taking their medicine. Infármate’s SIGUEMED comes with a trackable blister pack, alerting caregivers when patients take a pill. A companion app informs of the right time to take the pill and alerts contact persons if a mistake has been made.

5. Telemedical platforms

All of these above options can be supplemented by telemedicine consultations. Through these, patients and physicians can routinely hold remote consultations to ensure proper adherence of patients’ to medications. The latter can in turn use such platforms to request advice or raise concerns with their physicians. Given their rising adoption as a result of the pandemic , patients and physicians can leverage the availability of such platforms for medication management.

While these tools hold promise in medication management and enable the digital health patient to become more proactive in their care, they are not definitive solutions. They might not be accessible in all communities due to lack of resources, but their assistance can nevertheless help put a dent in the avoidable burden associated with medication management.

Natercia Rodrigues

I help healthcare companies create valuable products and services based on deep human insight. Let's talk.

2 年

this is not about forcing people into compliance, forcing people to take medicines or undergo medical procedures is not acceptable. The fundamental question very few seem to be asking is “why” are people afraid of medication?

Subha Ramiah

Digital Health & Innovation Executive | E-Learning Technological Solutions | Business Transformation | Product / Program Management | App Development & Cloud Computing | Talent Recruitment | Training & Leadership

2 年

Bertalan Meskó, MD, PhD Thanks for your thought leadership and timely article...In 2015 the US 3.2 Trillion spend reported by CMS/Actuary documented 325B of that spend in Rx medications. In 2022 it is projected to be much higher due to the pandemic. I consider myself extremely focussed on my health and use the Hero for my 2 meds and 8 vitamin supplements. There are some AI/disruptions in this space as you pointed out...with medication adherence apps with reminders, cross-interaction, side effect details and even a pictures of taking medication as a compliance record. As you clearly laid out, the medication adherence is a tough nut to crack. Industry statistics show 30% of the prescribed medications are never picked up. Of those which are dispensed/picked 30% are never consumed. As 10,000 baby boomers with multiple-comorbidities retire EVERY DAY in the US since 2011 and continuing this area is ripe for disruption. Most adults take 2-3 Rx medications. One of the way we could solve this challenge is consolidation of the 5P ecosystem. Today the Providers prescribe, Payers pay - MD's have no way of knowing the efficacy nor compliance and Pharma is not incentivised to solve this problem. The push and transformation will come when patients hold the purse due to our disjointed 5P ecosystems/incentives I talk about in the article (https://bit.ly/platformhealth)

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Eric Gombrich

Mission-driven healthcare leader helping organizations improve outcomes through the deployment of innovative solutions to local & global challenges in healthcare delivery; father, husband, foodie and (bad) golfer.

2 年

Great summary. Although #1 has value limited to those who are stationary. If I'm at work, I'm not near the dispenser. #2, 3, and 5 are are gaining great traction, particularly when the DTx (#3) clinical and financial impact is proven in randomized clinical trials and FDA (or other regulatory agency) cleared. When done right, #2 and 3 offer levels of scalability that current face-2-face encounter paradigms and #5 don't given the limited (and shrinking) number of healthcare professionals available to 'meet' with patients.

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Andrew Rut

Global Life Sciences & PV Strategy Leader | Physician, Entrepreneur & Strategic Advisor

2 年

Great article! As In mention in a related post 'Ignoring adverse events, or failing to address them, only has one consequence - non-adherence.' https://www.dhirubhai.net/posts/andrewrut_why-bother-telling-patients-about-adverse-activity-6895711708552511488-Rn2F

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