J.F. van Boven
University of Groningen
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Featured researches published by J.F. van Boven.
Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2016
J.F. van Boven; Agg Stuurman-Bieze; Eric Hiddink; Maarten Postma
Abstract Objective: Suboptimal adherence in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients is associated with decreased clinical and economic outcomes. Intervention programs, targeted at patients with suboptimal adherence and exacerbations, offer opportunities for cost-effective COPD care. We have aimed to assess the effects of the Medication Monitoring and Optimization (MeMO) targeted COPD intervention. Methods: Twenty community pharmacies participated in this 1 year real-world study with a pre-test/post-test design. Patients with a physician-confirmed COPD diagnosis, oral corticosteroid use, suboptimal adherence and Clinical COPD Questionnaire (CCQ) score ≥1 were selected by pharmacists. Pharmacy interventions included inhalation instruction, medication information and motivational interviewing regarding adherence and smoking cessation. Proposals for dose, medication and/or inhaler change and physical activity or diet recommendations were discussed with the general practitioner (GP), physiotherapist or dietician, when deemed relevant. Primary endpoint was the change in CCQ score. Secondary outcomes were adherence, exacerbations, healthcare utilization, quality of life (EQ-5D), modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) dyspnea score and cost-effectiveness. Results: Interventions were performed in 88 patients (mean age: 69; 52% male; mean CCQ: 2.10). The most often performed interventions were inhalation instruction (89%), medication education (98%) and adherence counseling (58%). Respectively 9%, 45% and 16% were referred to GP, physiotherapist or dietician. After 1 year, mean CCQ decrement was 0.12 and 38% showed a clinically relevant improvement. There was a significant decrease in exacerbations (-0.82) per patient per year. Adherence, mMRC and EQ-5D hardly changed. Per patient, annual medication costs were €26 higher, interventions cost €33, but total healthcare costs were €333 lower. The small sample size and lack of a control group were the main limitations. Conclusion: By specifically targeting COPD patients with potential room for improvement, the MeMO COPD program has the potential to be an effective and cost-saving method for preventing exacerbations. However, no effects on quality of life have been observed. Larger studies are therefore recommended.
Osteoporosis International | 2014
Agg Stuurman-Bieze; Eric Hiddink; J.F. van Boven; Stefan Vegter
International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy | 2013
J.F. van Boven; Eric Hiddink; Agg Stuurman-Bieze; C. C. M. Schuiling-Veninga; Maarten Postma; Stefan Vegter
Value in Health | 2011
J.F. van Boven; P. Oosterhof; Eric Hiddink; Agg Stuurman-Bieze; Maarten Postma; Stefan Vegter
Value in Health | 2017
Av van Schoonhoven; M. de Vries; J Gout-Zwart; Pepijn Vemer; J.F. van Boven; E Dvortsin; Maarten Postma
Value in Health | 2017
J.F. van Boven; Hicham Benhaddi; Nicolas Roche; Leif Bjermer; Marc Miravitlles; Jaco Voorham; David Price
Value in Health | 2016
S van der Schans; Lucas M.A. Goossens; Boland; Janwillem Kocks; Maarten Postma; J.F. van Boven; Mp Rutten-van Mölken
Value in Health | 2014
J.F. van Boven; Eline Tommelein; Koen Boussery; Els Mehuys; Stefan Vegter; Guy Brusselle; Mölken Mp Rutten-van; Maarten Postma
Pharmaceutisch weekblad | 2014
J.F. van Boven; Eline Tommelein; Els Mehuys; Koen Boussery; Stefan Vegter; Guy Brusselle; Mp Rutten-van Mölken; Maarten Postma
Journal de pharmacie de Belgique | 2014
J.F. van Boven; Eline Tommelein; Koen Boussery; Els Mehuys; Stefan Vegter; Guy Brusselle; Mp Rutten-van Mölken; Maarten Postma