One of the greatest dangers in heart care unfolds after patients leave the hospital, when they are left to manage medication adherence barriers on their own. A recent survey shows the risk clearly: 52% of patients who received heart stents reported missing doses or altering their oral antiplatelet medication regimen—even after being told how critical it is for their recovery.
Patients who have experienced a sudden cardiac arrest, a heart attack, or another life-threatening cardiovascular event need proactive support, especially during the critical post-discharge period, where medication adherence can save lives.
The numbers tell a troubling story. Research tracking adherence rates of patients after a heart attack reveals quiet breakdowns in medication-taking behavior across all cardiology medication classes. Despite evidence that patients who adhere to prescribed therapies live longer and avoid repeat events, many fall out of adherence, including:
These aren’t just statistics. Each percentage point represents thousands of patients at risk for repeat cardiac events.
The post-discharge period creates a perfect storm of adherence challenges, such as:
The first week after discharge is the highest-risk window. This is exactly when patients need the most support.
How can pharmaceutical brand, market access, and patient support teams break down medication adherence barriers?
Digital engagement tools improve adherence when they fit directly into existing EHR workflows. The strongest solutions combine prescribing insights for providers with personalized provider-to-patient messages offering direct connections to educational and cost-saving resources. Additional reminders—when a prescription is ready for pickup or due for a refill—can help patients stay on track longer term.
For brand teams, timing matters. Therapy details need to reach both providers and patients at the moment of prescribing—not weeks later.
Knowing what medications their patients can access and afford is essential for successful prescribing. With brand-specific insights embedded in the EHR workflow, providers are alerted when ICD-10 codes are required for prior authorization, as well as special pharmacy routing needs and cost considerations based on patients’ specific benefits. With better information at the point of care, providers can address adherence risks before the patient is discharged.
Early intervention matters most. Instead of waiting for patients to hit barriers at the pharmacy, an end-to-end engagement platform triggers personalized, interactive messages on behalf of their provider. Pharma teams create engagement programs that actually stick when patients get copay cards, guided support program enrollment, or behavioral nudges on their smartphones.
When pharma teams align around these pivotal moments, the impact extends beyond individual programs, so:
Improving adherence—and the data gathered in the process—delivers added benefits in the form of real-world evidence (RWE). Increasingly, payers want RWE to complement clinical trial data when making formulary decisions, especially for costly specialty medications, regardless of therapeutic class.
For example, a major payer used RWE to evaluate an oral asthma biologic. Pharmacy Times notes that the payer expanded the drug’s preferred formulary status and removed prior authorization requirements after the data showed fewer hospital visits and lower costs for patients who previously struggled with adherence to standard inhalers.
Every missed dose is more than lost revenue—it’s a missed chance to improve patient outcomes. Meta-analysis of 400,000 patients found a 20% improvement in cardiovascular medication adherence could reduce the risk for cardiovascular events by 8% and all‐cause mortalities by 12%, respectively. That helps everyone:
The math is simple: Keeping patients on evidence-based therapy costs far less than treating preventable complications. But the real measure of success isn’t financial—it’s lives saved through systematic, coordinated support.
Survival after a cardiac crisis is only the first step. Long-term success depends on helping patients start and stay on treatments that pump new life into their recovery.
Ready to see how pharma leaders are breaking down patients’ medication adherence barriers? Get started now!