Studies: Medication affordability leads to nonadherence

By HME News Staff
Updated 11:07 AM CST, Wed March 4, 2026
MIAMI – Medication nonadherence among people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a result of lack of affordability and lack of knowledge about medications, among other factors, according to two new studies published in the January 2026 issue of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases: Journal of the COPD Foundation. This leads to increased exacerbations and faster lung function decline, researchers say.
In one of the new studies, researchers examined a group of 2,521 participants from the COPD Genetic Epidemiology (COPDGene) study, who completed social and economic surveys. Cost-related nonadherence was reported in 16.2% (408) of those participants. These individuals had either not filled a prescription or taken less medication because of expense or lack of coverage. Of those, 93.5% had some form of health insurance.
“There are a variety of factors that can cause medication nonadherence,” said Rajat Suri, M.D., M.S., of the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine at University of California San Diego and lead author of the study. “For people with COPD and other chronic lung diseases, cost is a significant factor. Many COPD treatments are brand-name inhalers with high out-of-pocket costs. Broader policy changes are needed to make these medications more affordable.”
In the other new study, researchers conducted interviews with a small cohort of participants from a single academic medical center in Chicago. Of the 17 participants, nearly half reported not taking their medications as prescribed or using their inhalers incorrectly. Participants cited forgetfulness, physical limitations, limited understanding of how or when to use inhalers, difficulty accessing care, stigma and cost as barriers.
“Medication nonadherence is common, but the reasons behind it are highly individual,” said Stephanie L. LaBedz, M.D., of the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep, and Allergy at University of Illinois Chicago and lead author of the study. “Physicians need to understand the full range of barriers their patients face so they can provide better education and connect them with support to ensure medications are used correctly.”
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