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Medication Adherence clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06034301 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Pill Bottle vs Reminder App

Start date: September 18, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Current medication adherence interventions are minimally effective, which results in higher rates of morbidity and mortality for 45 million US adults who have hypertension and low adherence. This feasibility randomized controlled trial seeks to understand the efficacy of reminders and monitoring in the form of a mobile phone application vs usual care on medication adherence as well as the feasibility of the intervention and study procedures. This study will compare participants who use a mobile phone app that notifies them when to take their medications (intervention group) to participants who do not get assigned the app (control group) for 30 days. Medication adherence will be monitored using a Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMS) cap. Both groups will also receive the usual care, which will include giving participants a pamphlet about taking their medications. The long-term goal of this work is to improve antihypertensive medication adherence and to decrease morbidity and mortality. The objective of this application is to test the efficacy of the app based reminders and feedback. The hypothesis driving this research is that the intervention will be more effective than the usual care. The specific aims are as follows:

NCT ID: NCT06027814 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

MHealth Incentivized Adherence Plus Patient Navigation

MIAPP
Start date: January 3, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Polysubstance use involving opioids and methamphetamine is emerging as a new public health crisis. Patients with opioids and methamphetamine use often experience serious medical complications requiring hospitalization, which provides an opportunity to offer addiction treatment. Yet linkage to outpatient treatment post-discharge is suboptimal and methamphetamine exacerbates outcomes. The investigators propose to pilot test "MHealth Incentivized Adherence Plus Patient Navigation" (MIAPP) to promote treatment linkage and retention for patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) and methamphetamine use who initiate buprenorphine in the hospital. The investigators Aim is to perform a two-arm, pilot randomized clinical trial (n=40) comparing MIAPP + treatment-as-usual (TAU) versus TAU alone on outpatient medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) linkage within 30 days (primary) and 90-day retention on medications (secondary) among hospitalized patients with OUD and methamphetamine use.

NCT ID: NCT06023615 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

MITIGAAT: Multifaceted Intervention To Improve Graft Outcome Disparities in African American Kidney Transplants

Start date: February 27, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized study to test a smartphone app that a pharmacist will use to help kidney transplant patients track their medications, blood pressures, and blood sugars in those with diabetes. The goal of this study is to improve care and outcomes in kidney transplant patients and, in particular, help African American patients have better outcomes after transplant.

NCT ID: NCT06004102 Completed - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

Medication Adherence in Kidney Transplant

Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aims and Objective: The study aimed to assess the impact of text message reminders on medication adherence among kidney transplant recipients. Background: One of the most common problems encountered in transplant patients is incompatibility with immunosuppressive drugs, one of the most important reasons for graft rejection. Design: A randomized controlled trial was conducted from January to October 2021 and conducted in accordance with the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials 2010 guidelines. Methods: This randomized controlled trial included a total of 100 patients receiving a kidney transplant, 50 in the intervention group and 50 in the control group. Patients in the intervention group were sent text message reminders four times a day during the 6th to 9th months after transplantation. Control patients received no such intervention. Tacrolimus concentrations in the bloodstream were monitored for all participants through measurements taken at months 7,8, and 9. Data collection tools included Sociodemographic and Descriptive Characteristics Form and Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence Scale. Research hypotheses H1- Sending text message reminders improves immunosuppressive medication adherence in kidney transplant recipients. H2- Utilization of text messages as reminders has a significant influence on tacrolimus blood profiles in kidney transplant recipients. H3- There is a correlation between the scores from the Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence Scale and mean tacrolimus plasma levels in kidney transplant recipients. H4- There is a correlation between the sociodemographic and descriptive characteristics of kidney transplant recipients and their mean scores from the Immunosuppressive Medication Adherence Scale.

NCT ID: NCT06000813 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

REACH-Es: Adapting a Digital Health Tool to Improve Diabetes Medication Adherence Among Latino Adults

Start date: July 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Latino individuals, the fastest growing ethnic minority population in the United States, have a higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes and diabetes-related complications, and are more likely to report inconsistent use of diabetes medications than non-Hispanic White individuals. The proposed project will test an interactive text message-based tool tailored to address barriers to taking diabetes medications that are relevant to Latino adults. If found feasible, acceptable, and usable, this intervention could serve as a scalable tool to improve diabetes management and reduce diabetes-related complications among Latino adults in the United States.

NCT ID: NCT06000566 Recruiting - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Drug Compliance and Affecting Factors in Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Start date: December 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to learn about the drug compliance of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis and, to figure our factors that affect the compliance. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Medication use and compliance in children with chronic diseases is an important problem, but do patients with JIA really use their medications in harmony? - Does the level of adherence to medications affect the quality of life of patients with JIA? Participants will be asked to fill the demographic form which includes personal information and nutritional habbits, Morisky Drug Compliance Scale - 8 and the pediatric quality of life inventory forms, with attending researcher Yesfa Sebnem Ozbay, M.D. This study is not an interventional study.

NCT ID: NCT05997901 Recruiting - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Helping People Adhere to Their Varenicline Treatment by Co-creating a Conversational Agent: A Feasibility Study

Start date: October 12, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this feasibility study is to co-create and evaluate a theory informed, evidence-based, patient-centered healthbot aimed at helping people adhere to their varenicline regimen. The main research questions it aims to answer are: 1. What are the challenges to varenicline adherence and strategies to overcome such challenges from the perspective of service users and service providers? 2. What features of a healthbot would help improve adherence to varenicline? 3. Does a healthbot developed to improve varenicline adherence meet the implementation outcomes and increase medication adherence as well as smoking cessation? The study will be conducted using the Discover Design Build and Test framework. - In the Discover phase, a literature review, 20 service user interviews, and 20 healthcare provider interviews will help inform the challenges to varenicline adherence, strategies to overcome them using the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation, and Behavior framework, and the ways in which a healthbot might help improve adherence. - In the Design, Build and Test phase, 40 participants will interact with a preliminary healthbot using the Wizard of Oz method, then provide feedback about their experiences in a follow up interview; and team members, including clinicians and researchers, will beta test and validate a more refined healthbot. In the last phase, a non-randomized single arm feasibility study, 40 participants will interact with the healthbot for 12 weeks and provide feedback about the acceptability, appropriateness, fidelity, adoption, and usability of the healthbot; and researchers will assess participants' medication adherence and smoking status.

NCT ID: NCT05979168 Not yet recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Effectiveness and Adoption of the TelTex4BP Intervention Among Adults With Hypertension in Nepal

TelTex4BP
Start date: August 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Despite evidence of preventing cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk through lifestyle changes, many patients with hypertension (HTN) do not comply with this and suffer from CVD and other complications. A previous study using a structured lifestyle intervention program has reported a 14% decrease in the 10-year risk of developing CVD at one year among hypertensive and diabetes patients. Low and Middle-Income countries (LMICs) struggle with a shortage of health workers to deliver such interventions. In this context, mobile phones can contribute to bridging this gap by incorporating them into the health system for health intervention delivery. There is a need to develop contextual mHealth intervention adapted to local needs and culture and test its effectiveness in LMIC settings like Nepal. Our previous small-scale pilot mHealth (text messages) study reported promising evidence in reducing blood pressure among hypertensive patients in the intervention arm [adjusted reduction in systolic blood pressure (BP) -6.50 (95% CI, -12.6; -0.33) and diastolic BP -4.60 (95% CI, -8.16; -1.04)], with a greater proportion achieving target BP (70% vs 48% in the control arm, p = 0.006)] and improving treatment compliance (p < 0.001) in Nepal. This finding supports the expansion to a large-scale trial of a structured mHealth intervention to see its long-term effectiveness and sustainability for patients with HTN to improve BP control and reduce CVD risk. Hence, this study aims to assess the effectiveness of a behavioural intervention through mHealth (telephone/mobile phone calls and text messages) informed by the RE-AIM framework for improving blood pressure control among patients with hypertension in a hospital (Manamohan Cardiothoracic Vascular and Transplant Center) of Kathmandu, Nepal.

NCT ID: NCT05963568 Not yet recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Stroke Minimization Through Additive Anti-atherosclerotic Agents in Routine Treatment II Study (SMAART II)

Start date: May 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of the Stroke Minimization through Additive Anti-atherosclerotic Agents in Routine Treatment II (SMAART-II) is to deploy a hybrid study design to firstly, demonstrate the efficacy of a polypill (Polycap ®) containing fixed doses of antihypertensives, a statin, and antiplatelet therapy taken as two capsules, once daily orally in reducing composite vascular risk over 24 months vs. usual care among 500 recent stroke patients encountered at 12 hospitals in Ghana. Secondly, SMAART II seeks to develop an implementation strategy for routine integration and policy adoption of this polypill for post-stroke cardiovascular risk reduction in an under-resourced system burdened by suboptimal care and outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT05954000 Completed - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

Reducing African-American CVD Disparities Intervention Optimization (RADIO) Individuals on Statins

RADIO
Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to identify the minimum effective dose (MED) of a multi-component behavioral change intervention required to increase levels of medication adherence among Black and African American individuals on primary prevention statin therapy who are at elevated risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). The intervention will be comprised of 5 BCTs which have previously shown to be effective on increasing health behaviors: Goal Setting, Action Planning, Self-Monitoring, Feedback, and Prompts/Cues. Participants will complete a 2-week run-in period where medication adherence levels will be measured using a smart pill bottle and physical activity (PA) will be measured using Fitbit wearable devices. Then 42 participants will be randomized into 14 cohorts of 3 participants each for the intervention period. During the intervention period, participants will receive a multi-BCT intervention, the length of which varies between 1 and 10 weeks depending on the assigned dose. Assignment to doses will utilize a modified version of the Time-to-Event Continual Reassessment Method (TiTE-CRM) methodology to adjust the dose for each cohort based on the results from the previous cohort. After the intervention, there will be a 2-week follow-up period. The MED will be defined as the smallest BCT dose (defined by weeks of intervention) associated with 80% of participants having a 20% medication adherence increase between the run-in and the follow-up periods. The long-term goal is reduce incidence of CVD among Black and African American individuals by increasing adherence to primary prevention statin medications.