View clinical trials related to Adherence, Patient.
Filter by:This study is a U.S.-based, 1 site (with 4 clinical settings), randomized controlled trial (with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Antibiotic Resistance Solutions Initiative) that will be implemented to evaluate traditional directly observed therapy (DOT) and electronic forms of DOT (eDOT) for tuberculosis (TB) treatment. The trial will assess whether eDOT that employs electronic communication methods, such as video via computer or cellphone, is a non-inferior approach to monitor TB treatment adherence, compared to traditional in-person DOT (ipDOT), in which a trained person is in the physical presence of patients as anti-TB drugs are ingested. ipDOT is the single best intervention proven to be successful when it comes to TB patients' adherence to therapy (which reduces risk of acquired drug resistance). However, ipDOT is resource intensive and many times challenging to facilitate in-person. If eDOT is found to be non-inferior to ipDOT, health departments and other clinicians might be able to provide eDOT to certain populations of TB patients in a more flexible and potentially cost-saving manner.
Adherence to rehabilitation interventions is associated with functional outcomes (e.g. independence in daily activities, return of motor function) after stroke. Low adherence to rehabilitation home programs is common after stroke. Interventions delivered via mobile health applications demonstrated positive effects on adherence to health behaviors (e.g. medication routines, smoking cessation). The investigators developed the iADAPT mobile application to support adherence to Strategy Training. Strategy Training is an iterative rehabilitation intervention the promotes goal setting, planning, and self-monitoring after stroke. This study examines the effects of the iADAPT mobile health application relative to a workbook on adherence to Strategy Training after stroke.
This study evaluates the effects of two different injury prevention exercise programs on sports-relevant performance tests and neuromuscular function in youth football players. Half of participants will receive education on an existing and previously tested exercise program, while the other half will receive education on a newly developed exercise program.
The purpose of this study is to provide a rich description of the parental perspectives of utilizing a mHealth application for data transfer during the single ventricle interstage monitoring period. A gap in the body of knowledge of single ventricle cardiac disease interstage will be explored with these research questions: 1) How do parents of children (< 5 years of age) with single ventricle disease describe their experiences using a mHealth application during the interstage period (first 6-12 months of child's life)? And 2) How do these experiences influence their decision making for use of the mHealth application?
Oral anticancer treatments are increasingly numerous. They represent an additional alternative in the therapeutic arsenal of the clinician, and appear to satisfy patients who prefer this route of administration over intravenous treatment. The objective of oral therapies is twofold: to remove the constraints and risks associated with infusions and to allow the patient to follow his treatment at home. However, they have significant adverse effects that may affect patients, who are sometimes at a disadvantage compared to how they are treated, and potentially lead to non-compliance with the consequences. This study will identify the factors associated with non-adherence and determine the impact of this non-adherence in terms of treatment efficacy and tolerance. The aim of this routine care study is to evaluate the adherence to oral anticancer therapies during 3 months.
This study consists of two projects: Project 1: The study team will create and refine the CFI-EA by enrolling 3 clinicians and 9-12 patients to test the CFI-EA's feasibility and acceptability from patient and clinician feedback in a pre-pilot trial. The study team will first train clinicians in the CFI-EA by reading over the CFI-EA treatment manual and practicing how they can use it in behavioral simulations, and then check whether participants think they can do it (feasibility) and like it (acceptability) through standard measures. Following this the study team will revise the CFI-EA based on their feedback for the comparative open trial in Phase 2. Project 2: The study team will test the revised CFI-EA against treatment as usual in a pilot trial. 3 clinicians and 12-15 patients will be enrolled in each arm. As before, the study team will first train clinicians in the revised CFI-EA by reading over the CFI-EA treatment manual and practicing how they can use it in behavioral simulations. Then, the study team will check whether participants think they can do it (feasibility) and like it (acceptability) through standard measures, and in addition will also explore any initial effects on communication behaviors among patients and clinicians and treatment engagement based on treatment retention. The specific aims are: For Project 1: 1. To pretest the CFI-EA intervention in a mental health setting through a pre-pilot open trial that explores communication mechanisms of action in terms of communication behavior and cultural content, and 2. To revise the CFI-EA intervention based on patient and clinician feedback on its feasibility and acceptability. As real-world community stakeholders for whom the CFI-EA is being developed, patients and clinicians can provide helpful perspectives on how the CFI-EA can help clinicians tailor treatment plans around patient cultural views and treatment preferences to keep patients in care. The CFI-EA will be revised around areas of maximal agreement among patients and clinicians with the help of health disparities and communication experts. For Project 2: 1. To test the revised CFI-EA's feasibility and acceptability among patients and clinicians in a pilot open trial against treatment as usual, and 2. To explore the relationship between the revised CFI-EA's effects on patient-clinician communication and treatment engagement. The study team hypothesize that clinicians using the revised CFI-EA will show more positive communication behaviors compared to clinicians delivering treatment as usual and that CFI-EA patients will stay in treatment longer. Communication behaviors will be assessed through communication analysis techniques such as the Roter Interaction Analysis System.