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Medication Adherence clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04956406 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Kidney Transplantation

Motivational Interviewing for Adult Kidney Transplant Recipients

MIAKTR
Start date: January 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effect of motivational interviewing on self-management of treatment regimen, medication adherence, and patient outcomes in adult kidney transplant recipients between 3 months and 6 months after kidney transplant in the transplant outpatient clinic. Design: The research is a single-centered, single-blind, parallel and 1:1 randomized active comparative experimental study. Method: A total of 80 individuals, of the 40 in the control group and 40 in the intervention group, will be included in the study. Motivational interview sessions for the intervention group will be held 3 times between 15-30 minutes with an interval of 10 days. The control group will be given routine care (approximately 1 hour of face-to-face standard training) by the nurse educator. Within the research pattern, intervention and control groups will be applied pre-test at the first interview and post test after one month. In addition, follow-up test will be performed 3th month. The data will be obtained using the Self-Management Scale in Kidney Transplant Recipients, Visual Analog Scale (VAS) for self-care and VAS for medication adherence. In the study, Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials- SPIRIT(2013) and CONSORT 2010 (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) were used.

NCT ID: NCT04899024 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

PrEP Affect Regulation Treatment Innovation

PARTI
Start date: January 31, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This multi-site randomized controlled trial enrolling sexual minority men who use stimulants and are currently taking pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). This randomized controlled trial will test the efficacy of a PrEP Affect Regulation Treatment Innovation (PARTI) condition comprised of a 5-session positive affect intervention delivered during smartphone-based Contingency Management (CM) for directly observed PrEP doses (PARTI+CM) compared to an attention-control condition delivered during CM. The primary outcome is HIV acquisition risk measured using a combination of tenofovir-diphosphate levels in dried blood spots that are indicative of sub-optimal adherence to PrEP and recent condomless anal sex.

NCT ID: NCT04797949 Recruiting - Preeclampsia Clinical Trials

Adherence to Universal Aspirin Compared to Screening Indicated Aspirin for Prevention of Preeclampsia

Start date: March 3, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

There are data showing that a majority of pregnant women may not be accurately identified as high risk through screening and therefore, not receiving prophylactic low dose aspirin as recommended. This leads to missing many patients who would benefit from aspirin administration. Aspirin is an effective, affordable and safe intervention and its universal use in pregnancy has been proposed as the answer to help mitigate risk of significant morbidity from preeclampsia. However, adherence to aspirin in women at low risk compared to those deemed at high risk of preeclampsia has never been studied. One of the arguments against universal aspirin administration is the concern that universal receipt would change the compliance in those at high risk although there are no data to support this concern. To address the lack of data on differences in adherence, our goal in this proposal is to assess whether there is a difference in adherence to low dose aspirin (81 mg) in women at high risk of preeclampsia as indicated by USPSTF risk algorithm when compared to those women randomized to universal use.

NCT ID: NCT04772066 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

Tools to Assess Medication Adherence

Start date: November 1, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The issue of medication adherence (MA) has long been undestimated but is now growing interest due to both the increase of patients with chronic diseases and the aging of the population. According to the World Health Organization, only 50% of patients with chronic illnesses correctly follow physician's prescriptions in developed countries. Beyond the individual consequences that failure to adherence can engender (increased morbidity, mortality and hospitalizations), this concept also encompasses a collective dimension (risk of transmission of infectious diseases and increased health care costs). Today, improving MA would have more impact on human health than developping new medical therapies. That's why detecting non-adherence constitutes a major public health issue in which pharmacists play a significant role through medication reconciliation and patients' education. The methods wildly used are based on indirect measurement: questionnaires completed by the patient himself or the Medication Possession Ratio (MPR). Each method has its own advantages and disadvantages, but none is considered as the gold standard. The Montpellier University Hospital set up a MA self-report scale ranging from 0 (low) to 10 (high adherence) in the various care units where the clinical pharmacy activity is deployed. The purpose of this study was to assess the MA according to this numerical scale and the MPR calculation, and evaluate the correlation between these two methods.

NCT ID: NCT04708756 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Collabree: An Intervention to Improve the Regularity of Medication Intake

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

This a clinical study to improve medication adherence among patients with hypertension in Switzerland. Adult men and women who suffer from high blood pressure and have been prescribed a therapy consisting of at least 4 tablets per day can participate in this study. The investigators intend to examine whether Collabree, a mobile phone application, is effective in supporting patients with hypertension to more successfully following their therapy plan. The study will also investigate if the use of Collabree can help lower blood pressure. The study consists of 4 visits that take place during a 90-day adherence promotion program plus a 90-day follow-up period. There is also a screening visit before the study to determine whether the participants qualify for the study. The visits are carried out at the University Hospital Basel. Each visit lasts about 1-2 hours. During the visits, blood pressure is measured in the clinic and also through 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM). Participants will also fill out questionnaires. Participants are randomly assigned to one of 3 groups in a ratio of 1: 1: 1. Two of these groups will receive the Collabree mobile phone application. All participants will receive a box for storing their antihypertensive medication. This box serves as a system for measuring medication intake as it records the time the box is opened and closed. Standard care will given to all participants.

NCT ID: NCT04684277 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Internet-Based Interventions for MDD

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

The acute and remission depression patients of 18-65 years old were recruited. At the time of enrollment, the demographic, symptomatic, neuropsychological and medication adherence data was collected. After the completion of the baseline assessment and examination, the patients were given antidepressant treatment or antidepressant treatment combined with Internet-based interventions. Clinical evaluation was performed at 1, 3 months (acute patients) and 6, 12 months (remission patients) after treatment, including the medication adherence, therapeutic efficacy, recurrence rate and functional rehabilitation. Through above work, this research is expected to provide clinicians with a set of Internet generalized technologies to improve the compliance and clinical outcomes of patients with depression, and to provide patients with treatment and management of the entire disease cycle.

NCT ID: NCT04656028 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

Genetic Testing and Motivational Counseling for FH

GENMOTIV-FH
Start date: June 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To date, there are highly effective lipid-lowering drugs, the combination of which makes it possible to achieve the target level of LDL-C in most patients with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). However, the effectiveness of treatment of FH patients strongly depends on adherence to lipid-lowering therapy and to the healthy lifestyle, as well as the detection of the disease and the therapy prescription as early as possible, better in childhood. The aim of the study is to assess the impact of genetic testing and motivational counseling on the effectiveness of treatment and cascade screening in patients with FH.

NCT ID: NCT04585594 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Mi Propio Camino Intervention RCT for Blood Pressure Medication Adherence

MPC
Start date: September 16, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of two educational interventions on adherence to blood pressure medications among adults with uncontrolled hypertension.

NCT ID: NCT04217174 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

An Avatar-based Mobile Phone Intervention to Promote Health in African American MSM

Start date: March 4, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose to determine the efficacy of "My Personal Health Guide," a theory-based innovative talking relational human Avatar mobile phone application to engage HIV-positive AAMSM in adherence and retention in care. Providing an empathetic talking Avatar source of HIV-related information, motivation, and behavioral skills that is as private and convenient as their own mobile phone might produce a high impact by overcoming barriers to HIV adherence and retention in care such as stigma and health literacy.

NCT ID: NCT04173416 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Medication Adherence

The Youth Opioid Recovery Support (YORS) Intervention

YORS
Start date: February 17, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Youth are disproportionately affected by the current opioid crisis with catastrophic consequences, and young adults with opioid use disorder (OUD) often struggle with adherence to relapse prevention medications. The Youth Opioid Recovery Support (YORS) model is a promising, innovative, wrap-around approach that addresses barriers to medication adherence and treatment engagement in an effort to improve public health outcomes in this vulnerable young adult population. This study seeks to refine the YORS intervention through stakeholder input and pilot iterative testing followed by an efficacy randomized controlled trial. This project will significantly contribute to our knowledge base of practical strategies to address the opioid crisis.