BACKGROUND: Suboptimal medication adherence is a major determinant of treatment outcome. Between a third and a half of prescribed medicines for long-term conditions are not taken as intended, the reasons for which are numerous and multifaceted. Improving medication adherence should optimise therapeutic outcomes. AIM: To identify effective and readily implementable patient-focused interventions for improving medicines adherence that can inform best practice to improve health outcomes. METHOD: Medline, CINAHL and EMBASE were searched on 11 May 2022 for publications added since 11 January 2013, along with citation searches linked to Nieuwlaat's 2014 Cochrane review. An umbrella review was undertaken of meta-analyses and systematic reviews of empirical research to identify and describe interventions that improve medication adherence. Effective interventions were assessed for their implementation potential. RESULTS: Strategies to improve medication adherence follow common themes. Fifteen reviews and meta-analyses were identified, and interventions were grouped into eight types. These included using pharmacists to provide interventions
providing face to face interventions
using combination formulations
providing reminders and prompting mechanisms
giving feedback on individual adherence rates
promoting positive habits
using strategies to enhance self-management and positive behaviours
and using interventions in parallel. CONCLUSION: There are several readily implementable intervention approaches with demonstrable effectiveness based on systematic review or meta-analysis evidence. However, owing to the diverse evidence base in this field, and the significant risk of bias in many studies, further work is needed to understand the comparative value of different interventions and their impact on patient-oriented outcomes.