Medication Adherence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Electronic Medication Adherence Reporting and Feedback During Care Transitions
Patients often have problems with their medications after leaving the hospital and going back home. The goals of this study are to provide a special electronic pill-box with pre-filled weekly medication trays that can alert patients when it is time to take their medications, alert family members (with patients' permission) if there is a problem, and produce a report of medication-taking habits for patients' primary care providers. The investigators will evaluate the effects of this technology on patients' ability to take their medications safely, on the control of chronic conditions like high blood pressure, and also ask patients about any barriers to using this technology in the real world. The investigators hypothesize that a smart pillbox (i) can be successfully implemented in the transitions setting, including engagement of patients, caregivers, and providers in electronically available medication adherence reports; (ii) will decrease medication discrepancies and increase medication adherence in the 6 months after hospital discharge; and (iii) among patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hyperlipidemia will improve routinely collected measures of disease control.
Adverse drug events are very common after hospitalization and are due to a variety of
factors, including misunderstanding of the correct medication regimen and non-adherence with
that regimen. The goals of this study are to implement and evaluate a novel "smart pillbox"
using health information technology (HIT) to minimize discrepancies in prescribed regimens
and improve adherence after hospital discharge. To the investigators' knowledge this type of
technology has not been studied in the transitions setting, where there are unique challenges
but also tremendous opportunities to engage patients, caregivers, and providers in medication
safety and to improve care.
Specific Aims:
1. Implement a smart pillbox intervention for patients discharged from the hospital to the
community
a. Hypothesis 1: a smart pillbox can be successfully implemented in the transitions
setting, including engagement of patients, caregivers, and providers in electronically
available medication adherence reports
2. Evaluate the effects of the intervention on post-discharge medication discrepancies,
medication adherence, and chronic disease management
1. Hypothesis 2a: a smart pillbox intervention will decrease medication discrepancies
and increase medication adherence in the 6 months after hospital discharge
2. Hypothesis 2b: among patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and
hyperlipidemia, a smart pillbox intervention will improve routinely collected
measures of disease control
3. Determine barriers and facilitators of implementation of the intervention
To achieve these aims, the investigators will conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial.
This research design will allow for rigorous measurement of medication safety outcomes while
minimizing contamination and facilitating education of providers within each practice in the
access and use of medication adherence reports created by the smart pillbox and available as
a link within the Epic electronic health record (EHR).
This is a Pilot and Feasibility Study focused on several areas, most notably Implementation
and Outcomes, although it also evaluates Use (e.g., differences in use and efficacy among
in-network providers with access to adherence reports within the EHR and out-of-network
providers who do not have access), and Measurement (i.e., a measure of real-time medication
adherence that is automatically created by the HIT intervention). The study will generate new
knowledge about the benefits of this type of intervention on medication safety and will pave
the way for future studies to more precisely quantify the benefits on downstream patient
outcomes.
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