Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prospective Study of the Feedback From an Adherence Monitor on Asthma Control
Inhaled medications are the mainstay of the therapeutic management of respiratory disorders.
Considered by many to be 'simple' and 'easy' to use, clinicians are aware that inhalers are
often improperly used. However, there is no tool that can detect and record errors in either
the timing or the method dose administration
The investigators designed a device that makes an acoustic record each time an inhaler is
used. Opening the device makes an acoustic file which is recorded, this file is
"time-stamped" which means that the timing of drug administration is recorded. When the
device is retrieved and acoustic analysis performed, the steps involved in using the inhaler
can be determined. Hence, the subjects inhaler technique is assessed and errors in the
inhaler use identified. Together this means that errors in inhaler technique and timing of
use can be quantified.
In this study the investigators attached the device to a discus dry powder inhaler. In order
to eliminate the behavioral component of adherence and identify the mechanical issues
associated with effective inhaler use the investigators studied subjects who were already in
Hospital and already prescribed a discus inhaler. The investigators hypothesized that the
device would identify which errors in technique were the most common and that this would
provide insight into how these errors might be eliminated.
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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