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Non-Adherence, Medication clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04675593 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Using mHealth to Improve Adherence and Reduce Blood Pressure in Individuals With Hypertension and Bipolar Disorder

iTAB-CV RCT
Start date: March 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This proposed 2-stage randomized controlled trial (RCT) will evaluate a personalized patient-centered adherence intervention iTAB-CV + Self-Monitoring (iTAB-CV + SM) vs. Self-Monitoring (SM) alone in poorly adherent hypertensive persons with BD. This practical, technology-facilitated intervention has potential to improve adherence to antihypertensive medication and reduce SBP among high-risk individuals. The intervention is suitable for primary care or mental health settings and has potential for broad scale-up.

NCT ID: NCT04574648 Not yet recruiting - Adverse Drug Event Clinical Trials

Evaluating ActionADE on Adverse Drug Event Due to Non-Adherence

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

Repeat non-adherence to medications is a common cause of preventable adverse drug events. Health information technologies have the potential to improve information continuity. However, they rarely interoperate to ensure providers can view non-adherence information documented in other systems. The investigators designed ActionADE to enable rapid documentation of adverse drug events, including non-adherence, and communicate the information across health sectors by integrating ActionADE with legacy systems. The investigators will leverage ActionADE's implementation to conduct a randomized trial on patients diagnosed with an adverse events due to non-adherence. This study will take place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

NCT ID: NCT03105687 Completed - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of SMS Reminders of Blood Pressure-lowering Drugs Intake

SPPA
Start date: June 16, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

By conducting the SPPA trial we try to find out, whether personalized Short Message Service (SMS) reminders of blood pressure-lowering medication can effectively increase patients' adherence to blood pressure-lowering medication. Additionally, we also evaluate their effect on patients' systolic blood pressure control.