View clinical trials related to Patient Adherence.
Filter by:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide, according to recent publications of the World Health Organization, its main feature is the response to noxious particles of gases, which trigger an inflammatory response with its sequence secondary to the flow of air, the limitation generated by the ventilation reserve mechanism of insufficiency, dyspnea and dysfunction at the muscular level, these limitations generate a high degree of disability worldwide in the different areas of the people who suffer from it, which it affects their basic performance and their interaction with the environment. The World Health Organization, in a more recent projection, predicted that COPD will increase from its recent classification as the fifth most common cause of mortality to the fourth most common cause by 2030, which would place it behind ischemic cerebrovascular disease, HIV / AIDS and heart disease. More importantly, COPD is a cause that increases chronic disability and is expected to become the fifth most common cause of chronic disability worldwide by 2020. There is great evidence on the benefit of pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with COPD, which generates changes among which is tolerance to exercise, dyspnea, control of symptoms and improvement in the quality of life related to health. It should be noted that pulmonary rehabilitation not only includes physical training, but also involves the educational component in relation to healthy habits. In this way, patients who have achieved a successful form of a pulmonary rehabilitation program must obtain an improvement in their physical and psychological state, following up on this type of patients, achieving the empowerment of the health process and improving long-term symptoms and healthy lifestyle habits. Therefore, the objective of this study is to carry out a telephone education and a follow-up plan that emphasizes the importance of physical activity with adequate parameters to be part of the lifestyle of patients and to comply with the activity.
The investigators hypothesize that exercise training program guided by virtual augmented reality glasses or by video from computer screen used at home will improve motivation into exercise training and results in superior adherence to exercise training compared to current practice. The primary objectives of this research project are to study the effects of exercise training guidance by novel technology on 1) exercise capacity, 2) adherence to exercise training, 3) changes in cardiac autonomic function and 4) quality of life in acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients.
Background: Cervical cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death among women worldwide, with more than 85% of cases occurring in low- and middle-income countries. Human papillomavirus (HPV) screening allows for self-collection with the potential to increase coverage, but still requires triage to identify which HPV+ women need diagnostic and treatment procedures. However, achieving high levels of triage adherence can be challenging, especially among socially vulnerable women. The ATICA protocol (Application of Communication and Information Technologies to Self-Collection, for its initials in Spanish), aimed at evaluating the implementation strategy and the effectiveness of a multi-component mobile health (mHealth) intervention to increase adherence to triage among women with HPV+ self-collected tests. Methods: Researchers will use an effectiveness-implementation hybrid type I trial with a mixed-methods evaluation approach. A cluster randomized trial design including 200 community health workers (CHWs) will evaluate whether the mHealth intervention increases adherence to triage among HPV+ women who self-collected at home during a CHW visit within 120 days after a positive result. The intervention includes an initial mobile phone text message (SMS) alert and subsequent reminders sent to HPV+ women. For those who do not adhere to triage within 60 days of a positive HPV test, an email and SMS will be sent to the CHWs to promote contact with these women during home visits. Reserchers will use the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) as an organizing and analytic framework to evaluate the implementation of the intervention while also drawing on Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM). Researchers will conduct a self-administered, semi-structured survey of CHWs, semi-structured interviews with local health authorities, and a survey of HPV+ women.
Therapeutic Patient Education (TPE) refers to programs that help patients to manage life with a chronic disease in the best possible way. In spite of the effectiveness of Therapeutic Patient Education, few patients uptake TPE when it is proposed to them. Therefore, our main aim was to identify patients' beliefs that will predict patients' uptake of TPE. According to the Health Belief Model, patient will participate in TPE if they perceive their disease as a serious threat (with possible serious complications), but which can be controlled however, and that TPE is efficient and represents little burden. Secondary aims are as follows: 1. To test whether the way TPE is presented to patients impact patients' decision to uptake TPE. The way TPE is presented comprises the time between diagnosis and the proposal of TPE, whether patient is a remission or crisis period in the disease, the time between the proposal and the next TPE session, and what is said by healthcare professionals to present TPE. 2. To test whether healthcare professionals' empathy impact patients' decision to participate in TPE 3. To test whether patients' intention to participate in TPE will predict their actual participation. The ultimate goal of the study is to identify patients whose beliefs will not favor participation in TPE in order to accompany those patients more carefully. Best practices will be proposed according the results.
Cardiovascular diseases are a leading cause of death worldwide. Some of the risk factors that have been identified are considered as be non-modifiable and modifiable. Among the non-modifiable, gender, age, race, family history and pathological antecedents such as diabetes and hypertension among others are taken into account. The modifiable factors are weight, abdominal circumference, habits such as smoking, alcohol consumption, diet and especially the EXERCISE. In order to modify these risk factors, patients are submitted to a strategy of health promotion, disease prevention, pharmacological treatments, non-invasive and invasive treatments such as cardiac catheterization, balloon coronary angioplasty and / or stent implantation, cardiovascular surgeries etc. However, one of the most important strategies that should be of great importance is to involve the patient and his family in these treatments through education and follow-up strategies whether it is through the telephone, home visit, e-mail, messages, etc. In this way, the patient is brought to a state of self-determination and self-awareness that leads him to perform physical activity routinely so he can change his cardiovascular risk factors and become a patient adherent to exercise or any other treatment. This is where the importance of exercise or aerobic physical activity is emphasized, as it is a low-cost activity that can be performed by any type of patient, and that results are easily observed in physical and physiological changes that can be objectively measurable, such as the levels in serum lipid profile (cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL and HDL), or cardiovascular function tests such as stress tests with METs indicating increased aerobic capacity (Improvement in ability to withstand a stress test). Therefore, the purpose of this study is to submit a group of patients to an education and telephone follow-up plan, emphasizing on the importance of performing physical activity with the appropriate intensity and frequency so that they can include it within their daily routine by itself and ensure "the adherence to physical activity". Physiological changes that these patients may present as a consequence of the acquired routine physical activity by being subject to the education and telephone follow-up plan of this research will be measured with serum HDL levels in a clinical laboratory test and MET in a stress test.
CCTG 603 is an open-label, two-arm, randomized (1:1) clinical demonstration project to determine if brief Motivational Interviewing (MI-B) added to a text-message based adherence intervention (iTAB) improves adherence to PrEP among transgender persons.
The small RCT will assess feasibility, acceptability, and impact of a real-time intervention on ART adherence and clinical outcomes for HIV-positive adolescents. All subjects will use a wireless pill container (WPC) to monitor adherence. Intervention subjects will receive a personalized triggered reminder (cellphone message/call or bottle-based flash/alarm) when they miss a dose, and engage in monthly counseling sessions informed by their adherence data. Comparison subjects will receive usual care and an offer of counseling at monthly clinic visits.
Low back pain is worldwide a common musculoskeletal condition with a high number of recurrences. Recurrence rate and the number of recurrences could be reduced and time to a next episode could be prolonged by advising an active lifestyle. Advising regular physical activity is the mainstay in physical therapy treatment. This includes an appeal to patients to adhere to an activity advice. Patient adherence to an activity advice is poor. In this study an intervention consisting of treatment of illness perceptions with or without organizing social support to increase adherence to an activity advice will be investigated. The primary objective of this study is to investigate whether social support by a partner or friend and treatment of patients' illness perceptions influences the rate of adherence to an activity advice compared to treatment of patients' illness perceptions alone in patients suffering non-specific low back pain. Secondary objectives are; a) whether 'treatment of illness perceptions' changes patients' maladaptive illness perceptions into realistic ones, b) whether maladaptive illness perceptions, comorbidity and/or overweighed/obesity and/or rate of recurrences of non-specific low back pain and/or attitude and intention to physical activity influences patient's adherence . This study is a multi-centre randomized two-arm controlled clinical trial. Patients ≥18 years presenting with at least a second episode of non-specific low back pain. Patients in the intervention and control group will be asked to perform a physical activity advice. During two physiotherapy treatment sessions treatment of illness perceptions is performed in both groups. In the intervention group organizing social support by a partner or friend is added. Twenty-five percent absolute improvement of walking and/or cycling according the NNGB in the intervention group is clinically relevant. During four appointments several questionnaires have to be filled in and during two physiotherapy treatment sessions half an hour treatment of illness perceptions will be performed. Social support by a partner or friend will be organized during the same physiotherapy treatment sessions in the intervention group. During three separate weeks patients have to wear an activity monitor. Patients will be treated according to the Dutch Low Back Pain guideline; no adverse effects will be expected.
The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of motivational interviewing in the adherence of patients with AF to oral anticoagulation (OAC) regimens. Patients assigned to the intervention group will be interviewed and guided on the importance of adherence to OAC medication, and will be contacted at 1 week, 2 months, 6 months and 1 year after discharge for educational interactive sessions. Patients in the control group will receive usual treatment and will be contacted at 1 year after discharge.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with impaired stroke recovery. Treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) may prevent this but is limited by poor adherence. In this study, the investigators enrolled eligible stroke patients undergoing inpatient rehabilitation (IPR) into an intensive CPAP adherence protocol (iCAP) with an aim to increase tolerance and adherence to auto-titrating CPAP (APAP).