View clinical trials related to Adherence, Medication.
Filter by:The goal of this experimental research is to increase adherence to a smoking cessation patch among Pittsburgh residents who are trying to quit smoking. The literature on smoking cessation shows that there is a significant problem with adherence when using a transdermal patch as a nicotine replacement treatment. Less than half of patients use the patch as prescribed and adherence suffers a rapid decline during the first six weeks of treatment (Waldroup, Gifford, & Kalra, 2006). Recent work in psychology demonstrates that being more connected to our "future selves" enables better long-term decision making, in part by making future rewards more salient (and making present rewards less so). To test whether a future selves intervention might facilitate patch adherence in a smoking cessation program, investigators will recruit participants planning to begin using nicotine patches in local smoking cessation programs, and randomly assign them to one of three conditions: 1) "discontinued-smoker" age-progressed future self virtual reality images vs. 2) "discontinued-smoker" + "continued smoking" age-progressed future self virtual reality images vs. 3) control - current self virtual reality images.