View clinical trials related to Medication Adherence.
Filter by:The proposed research is a randomized controlled investigation of the efficacy of motivational interviewing (MI) to improve adherence to aromatase inhibitors (AI) in a community sample of patients with poor adherence to AIs.
Background: In women with hormone receptor positive (HR+) breast cancer, adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) is associated with a significant survival advantage. Nonadherence is a particular challenge in older women, even though they stand to benefit the most from AET. Therefore, a novel e-health tool (OPTIMUM) that integrates real-time analysis of health administrative claims data was developed to provide point-of-care decision support for clinicians.
Medication non-adherence is an economic problem and a major public health challenge. Factors influencing medication adherence can be modelled according to five dimensions: disease, medication, patient and its close relatives, demographic and socioeconomic factors and health care system. A tool is needed to qualify medication adherence in order to adapt tailored support for individual patients to promote and optimize adherence to therapy. The objective of this work is to present the preliminary results of QUILAM project which is divided into 3 phases: 1. Development of a tool to assess barriers to medication adherence in chronic patient (COPD, Heart failure, Type 2 diabetes) ; 2. Validation of the instrument (especially against clinical criteria) ; 3. Evaluation of the sensitivity of the tool during educational interventions.
Stroke is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, especially in low and middle income countries including Iran. Patients with recent stroke or TIA are at high risk for new vascular events. Several evidence based strategies in secondary prevention of stroke are available but frequently underused. The study is aimed to evaluate an intervention to improve patients with Stroke.
The aim of this research project is to compare the use of "Talking Pill Bottles" to usual care in patients who have low functional health literacy and who purchase medications for primary hypertension at a retail pharmacy with regard to: 1. feasibility of the procedures, 2. utility of the equipment, 3. medication adherence, 4. self efficacy in medication self management, and 5. blood pressure control.
Investigators will employ a 2-arm Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) design with the subject as the unit of randomization and analysis. Kidney transplant recipients having uncontrolled hypertension will be enrolled into a screening phase to measure medication non-adherence. Each subject will use an electronic pill tray for 1 month without any reminder functions activated. Non-adherent subjects who remain uncontrolled will be randomly assigned to SMASK or Standard Care (SC). SC will continue to use the pill tray with reminders turned off and will receive attention control texts with healthy lifestyle information. SMASK will have the reminder functions of the electronic pill tray activated and will receive a Bluetooth blood pressure monitor and an app to collect the data and send to researchers. Subjects in the second phase will participate in 4 more evaluations at months 1, 3, 6, 12 post randomization. Research staff will measure resting blood pressure and heart rate.
People who inject drugs (PWID) have higher rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) than do other groups. Effective, safe new treatments called direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) have been developed recently. Unfortunately, PWID rarely get these treatments. The drugs are expensive, so insurers often do not cover the cost of DAAs. Sometimes providers hesitate to prescribe DAAs because they are concerned that PWID won't take their medication or that these patients might become reinfected. Several good models for treating PWID exist. One of them is to provide directly observed treatment (DOT). Another model provides treatment to PWID with the support of patient navigators (PN), public health workers who offer support and education to patients. Though both the DOT and PN models have been successful, we still don't know which model works best. In this study, the investigators will study both DOT and PN models for treating HCV in PWID. The investigators' goal is to find out which model produces the best results and is preferred by patients. Up to 1,000 HCV-infected PWID will participate in the study in eight sites around the country. Patients will be randomized into either the PN or the DOT groups. Patients who end up in the PN group will get a biweekly blister pack of medication to take home. Their PN will provide education and support. The investigators will find out whether patients adhered to medication using an electronic adherence monitoring system. Patients who are randomly assigned to the DOT group will take their medication in front of a staff member.
This study evaluates if motivational interviewing sessions aiming to motivate recently discharged patients with either chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or congestive heart failure to be active in post-discharge self-management can reduce re-hospitalization rates.
Aim The primary objective of this study is to compare medication adherence with medical therapy in patients receiving once-daily versus twice-daily tacrolimus regimens. Participants 60 adult renal transplant patients randomized 1:2 into twice-daily and once-daily tacrolimus groups Outcomes The primary outcome will be medication adherence to the once-daily and twice-daily regimens, measured in terms of implementation. Secondary outcomes will include graft and patient survival, renal function and adverse events. Follow up - 12 months
Introduction of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has transformed HIV-infection from a fatal to manageable disease but adherence to ART remains critical to optimize outcomes. Existing measures of ART adherence provide only inferred measures of actual drug intake and most offer no real-time notification capability. Directly observed therapy measures actual drug intake but is not practical. These limitations constrain research into medication adherence and more importantly, limit our ability to develop real-time interventions based on feasible, in vivo monitoring of adherence among HIV-infected people to facilitate medication-taking. The Proteus digital health feedback (PDHF) system, a pill ingestible sensor based adherence measuring and monitoring system developed by Proteus Digital Health, addresses these limitations. It involves use of an ingestible sensor, a tiny edible material that is over-encapsulated along with prescribed medication. The sensor is activated by ingestion and is sensed by a patch worn by the patient with an embedded monitor and sensor. The monitor sends a Bluetooth signal to a mobile device, which in turn sends an encrypted message to a central server, thus effecting real-time monitoring that a dose has been taken. The investigators propose to develop a data receiving hub and add to these components an automated text message that is sent to the patient when a dose is missed. The investigators will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and sustainability of using the PDHF system; assess the accuracy of the PDHF system in measuring adherence to ART; and evaluate the efficacy of the PDHF system for monitoring and leveraging adherence to ART.