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Showing 1-20 of 169 trials
NCT05131074
This is a clinical study to improve the regularity of medication intake for high blood pressure. Adult women and men who are over 50 years old, who have received a prescription drug for high blood pressure from MediService, and who have to take at least 4 tablets per day (of which at least 1 dose of medication per day is for high blood pressure) 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 in order to improve the regularity of medication intake. The study includes a 90-day intervention phase and a 90-day follow-up. The study does not require any therapy adjustments and no visits to a study center are necessary. The participants conduct the study independently at home. 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.
NCT06876233
The goal of this clinical trial is to determine the effectiveness of a novel mobile health-based habit formation intervention for increasing and maintaining adherence to anti-hypertensive (AH) medication among people living with hypertension and indicate medication nonadherence. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Can daily incentives for AH pill taking increase and maintain AH medication adherence, control blood pressure, and reduce healthcare utilization and costs? * Can daily incentives for AH pill taking, combined with action planning (e.g., "After I drink my morning coffee, I will take my medication.") increase and maintain medication adherence, control blood pressure, and reduce healthcare utilization and costs? * What aspects of daily incentives and/or action planning do participants find most helpful or effective for AH medication adherence? * What barriers exist for participants who receive daily incentives and/or action planning? Researchers will compare three study groups: those who only receive daily incentives for the AH pill taking, those who receive daily incentives for AH pill taking combined with action planning, and a control group (who do not receive daily incentives for AH pill taking or action planning). By comparing these three groups, the researchers will be able to determine the effectiveness of the daily incentives with or without action planning for promoting long-term AH medication adherence, reduce healthcare costs, and improve blood pressure. Participants will: * Complete 5 online surveys over the course of 2 years (baseline, month 4, month 8, month 12, month 24). * Submit blood pressure reading for 7 consecutive days after each survey timepoint. * Submit photo evidence of their AH pill taking for 4 months (intervention groups only). The highest- and lowest-performing participants in each intervention group will also be invited to complete a 30-minute interview to identify additional factors that contributed to either successful or unsuccessful completion of the intervention.
NCT05447442
Anemia in surgical patients is a common seriously problem; around 40 % of patients presenting for major surgery are anemic problem. Patients with major surgery have significantly higher rates of acute blood loss. Whereas , patients with pre-operative anemia prone to be transfused blood component in pre-operative or intraoperative and postoperative periods that associated with worse outcomes , prolonged hospital stays , increased risk of morbidity and mortality . Therefore, patients undergoing major surgery should be optimization for pre-operative anemia. In November 2021, Siriraj Preanesthesia Assessment Center (SIPAC) has developed and implemented a preoperative anemia management guideline which is one pillar of perioperative patient blood management. The objective of this guideline is to optimize red blood cell mass before patients having operation. The investigators are realize the important of pre-operative anemia of patients who undergoing elective surgery. The investigators will aim to evaluate adherence to the preoperative anemia management guideline protocol and perioperative outcomes and use the data of this study to setting guidelines for preoperative anemia evaluation and management in SIPAC of department of anesthesiology in Siriraj hospital for improving workflow and optimization before elective surgery, supporting to a reduction in blood transfusion, hospital stay, morbidity and health care costs of public health of Thailand.
NCT05732779
We will conduct a two-group randomized controlled trial to examine the eMocha DOT intervention with pediatric HT recipients.In this population, medication nonadherence remains a primary cause of late acute rejection (LAR) episodes, increased number of hospitalizations, graft failure, and patient mortality. Herein, we propose an innovative approach to promote medication adherence and improve patient and graft outcomes.
NCT07329985
Fear of hypoglycemia has a significant impact on both medication and dietary adherence in individuals with diabetes. Through avoidance behaviors, it can disrupt metabolic control, prevent the achievement of glycemic targets, and increase the risk of long-term complications. Therefore, monitoring only biochemical parameters is insufficient in diabetes management. It is crucial for healthcare professionals to systematically assess the fear of hypoglycemia.
NCT07415109
The study is meant to run parallel to the larger study, RESET. The goal of this study is to to evaluate the effectiveness of a once-off general and personality-tailored text message on GP consultation among RESET participants identified to have high LDL-C. The main question it aims to answer is: Will participants exposed to personality tailored advice have a higher adherence to GP consultation compared to the participants in the control group? Researchers will compare a personalized message to a general message (with no personalization according to patients personality type) and control group to see if drug the messages increase adherence. Participants are required to complete two questionnaires: one before and one after they receive their RESET results.
NCT05140876
This Phase II randomized controlled trial is testing the efficacy of a cell phone application called START for helping men who use stimulants like methamphetamine to get the most out of their HIV treatment.
NCT07309536
Toddlerhood (ages 2-3) is a critical window when the gut microbiome is still developing and eating habits are being established. Yet, many Canadian toddlers eat diets high in sugar and salt, which may affect long-term health. This study will test whether a MED diet can improve dietary inflammation, gut health, and body composition in toddlers and whether a tailored nutrition education program for parents can help families maintain healthy eating patterns. In this study, toddlers will be randomly assigned to a 3-week MED diet or their usual diet. Families in the MED diet group will receive free meal boxes for the 3 weeks, plus guidance from a nutrition researcher through a structured education program. The standard diet group will continue their regular diet with general nutrition advice. Researchers will collect dietary information, body composition assessments, and stool samples to measure gut microbiome composition and metabolites. This first study of a controlled diet intervention in toddlers, combining behavioral support, high-quality food provision, and advanced gut microbiome analysis, will help understand how early diet shapes lifelong eating habits and health, guiding public health strategies and precision nutrition approaches to prevent chronic disease from early life.
NCT07385183
This study looks at how to help people who use drugs start and keep taking medicine that can prevent HIV. The medicine is called PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis). The study investigators will use a pill called Descovy (F/TAF), which is already approved by the FDA for HIV prevention. People who come to the emergency department (ED) and test negative for HIV may join the study. Some participants will start taking PrEP and will be followed for one year. Other participants will only do an interview about their thoughts on PrEP. The study investigators will also talk to doctors and peer support workers in the ED to learn what makes it easier or harder to offer PrEP. The main goal is to see how well PrEP can be started and continued for people who use drugs. The study investigators will look at how many people start PrEP, how many keep taking it, and what helps or makes it hard to stay on PrEP. The study investigators will also learn about the best ways to connect people to care after they leave the ED. This study does not test if the medicine works to prevent HIV-that is already known. Instead, it looks at real-life challenges and solutions for using PrEP in this group. The study may help improve HIV prevention and health care for people who use drugs.
NCT07370298
People living with HIV (PLWH) have poor clinical outcomes when they are excluded from care due to intersectional stigma related to HIV, mental health (MH), and other dimensions. Recent studies and reviews have highlighted three major challenges in identifying and addressing intersectional stigma: a lack of stigma assessment strategies that are multi-dimensional and can be incorporated into routine clinical care, a lack of tailored stigma-reduction activities, and a lack of implementation of multi-level interventions. These gaps make it difficult to recognize and address intersectional stigma, leading to poor HIV care outcomes globally. Digital health tools, co-designed with PLWH and healthcare workers (HCWs), have the potential to assist ART centers in addressing these challenges. Guided by the principles of human-centered design, our team has developed a digital tool with three components that can address the challenges in assessing, prioritizing, and addressing intersectional stigma in ART centers. The components include: 1) a dynamic assessment strategy that can be used during a clinic visit to collect both quantitative (i.e., ratings) and qualitative data (i.e., free text of client's perspectives) on stigma reported by PLWH; 2) a dashboard that incorporates this stigma assessment data alongside routine clinical data (i.e., existing registry of clients in the ART center) so that ART centers can directly link stigma with care engagement, and also identify relevant stigma-reduction activities; and 3) a repository of evidence-based, culturally appropriate activities that can reduce stigma at the intrapersonal-, interpersonal-, and clinic-levels. The three components of the digital intervention are theoretically grounded and are based on prior studies and consultations with local partners. The study aims to assess the acceptability and feasibility of INCLUDE among clients, HCWs, and ART center leads in four ART centers. For this aim, we will conduct a pilot trial at four ART centers to assess the acceptability and feasibility of INCLUDE. If successful, this study will provide an intervention that can be incorporated into routine clinical practice to systematically identify and address intersectional stigma to improve HIV care, and can be tested in a cluster randomized trial with ART centers in Nepal and other regions that face similar challenges.
NCT07346664
Patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) require long-term medication and lifestyle modification following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). However, they often face challenges such as poor medication adherence and inadequate self-management. This study aims to evaluate the effects of the transitional care model (TCM) on CHD patients after PCI, regarding medication adherence, self-efficacy, and lipid levels.
NCT06150118
In this study, which aimed to develop a Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) protocol enriched with Virtual Reality (VR) to address the psychological responses that arise after ACL surgery, and to examine the effectiveness of this protocol. The effectiveness of the protocol was assessed using pre-test, post-test, and two follow-up measurements with the Re-Injury Anxiety Inventory (RIAI), the Sport Injury Rehabilitation Adherence Scale (SIRAS), the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK), the Athletic Injury Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (AISEQ), the Return to Sport After Serious Injury Questionnaire (RSSIQ), and the Anterior Cruciate Ligament Return to Sport Scale (ACL-RSI). Anxiety levels during VR exposure sessions were measured through biofeedback and the Subjective Units of Distress Scale (SUDS).
NCT04071951
This is a randomized trial testing a peri- and post-discharge pharmacist-led medication management intervention on post-discharge utilization, including both readmissions and emergency department visits within 30 days of discharge. The intervention incorporates evidence addressing three main areas: medication reconciliation, medication adherence, and polypharmacy. This study uses a pragmatic trial randomized at the patient level and conducted in two large hospitals to achieve the following aims, each of which has been designed using the RE-AIM framework: Aim 1: To test the effect of PHARM-DC on post-discharge utilization among patients most at risk for post-discharge ADEs: recently discharged older adults taking \>10 medications or \>3 high-risk medications using a prospective, randomized, pragmatic multi-site study. Aim 2: To study barriers and facilitators of implementing PHARM-DC using a qualitative study. Aim 3: To analyze the costs of PHARM-DC, including the incremental cost per readmission averted and the net incremental cost from the health system perspective using a time-and-motion study and a cost-effectiveness analysis.
NCT07273812
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if an Arabic-language mobile application that uses artificial intelligence (AI) can help women with breast cancer during chemotherapy. The app is designed to give personalized support by reminding participants about their medications, teaching them how to manage treatment side effects, and alerting their healthcare team about serious symptoms. The main questions this study aims to answer are: 1. Does the AI-based mobile app provide accurate and safe recommendations for the patients? 2. Does using the AI-based mobile app help lower treatment-related symptoms and side effects compared to usual care? 3. Does the app help participants take their medications more regularly? 4. Does it increase participants' understanding and satisfaction with the information they receive about their treatment? Researchers will compare two groups: Group 1: Participants who use the AI-based mobile app plus usual oncology care. Group 2: Participants who receive usual care only. Participants will: 1. Use the mobile app daily for 12 weeks while receiving chemotherapy. 2. Complete short questionnaires about symptoms, medication use, and quality of life at the start and end of the study. 3. Report any problems or feedback about using the app. The AI app is for support and education only. It does not make treatment decisions. All information from the app will be reviewed by oncologists and pharmacists to ensure participant safety.
NCT05887297
The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia on adherence to endocrine therapy medication in breast cancer survivors.
NCT06493773
To evaluate the efficacy of systematically offering newly diagnosed ALD patients to AUD treatment, in the hepatology clinic, on alcohol abstinence after 6 months. The investigators will conduct a randomized controlled superiority trial with parallel group design, hypothesis blinding and blinded outcome assessment comparing A) a offer to specialized AUD treatment (intervention) and B) standard care (control). Existing observational cohort ALD members will contribute to the control group in addition to the randomized controls. The primary outcome is abstinence throughout the last 30 days assessed 6 months after randomization.
NCT06000813
Latino individuals, the fastest growing ethnic minority population in the United States, have a higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes and diabetes-related complications, and are more likely to report inconsistent use of diabetes medications than non-Hispanic White individuals. The proposed project will test an interactive text message-based tool tailored to address barriers to taking diabetes medications that are relevant to Latino adults. If found feasible, acceptable, and usable, this intervention could serve as a scalable tool to improve diabetes management and reduce diabetes-related complications among Latino adults in the United States.
NCT06629454
This single-arm proof-of-concept research study aims to assess the effect of a digital incentive spirometer (IS) device and a companion mobile-based app on incentive spirometry adherence in patients post-surgery. The digital IS utilizes a sensor to measure inspiratory breaths, and these data are transmitted wirelessly to a secure cloud database. The spirometer and app include a patient reminder system, exercise gamification strategies, progress tracking, and additional features designed to promote patient IS use.
NCT04173416
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.
NCT07186244
Despite significant advances in HIV treatment, transmission remains a public health concern. In 2022, there were 1.3 million new HIV infections worldwide and 1,888 new diagnoses in Italy, with sexual transmission being the predominant route. Many individuals are still diagnosed late, and a portion of people living with HIV are unaware of their status. Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) has emerged as an effective biomedical strategy to prevent new infections, especially when integrated into comprehensive prevention efforts. Study Objectives The primary objective of this observational study is to establish a large prospective cohort of individuals using PrEP in Italy. The study aims to assess PrEP's effectiveness, tolerability, adherence, and barriers to long-term use in a real-world setting. These data will be instrumental in guiding future strategic interventions to optimize PrEP management and move toward the goal of zero new HIV infections in Italy. Primary Objective * To assess the incidence of new HIV infections among PrEP users in Italy. Secondary Objectives * Incidence of other sexually transmitted infections (STIs); * Tolerability of PrEP; * Psychological and behavioral aspects related to PrEP use; * Adherence and persistence in care; * Use of therapies and prophylaxis for STIs during PrEP use. Study Design and Coordination This is a prospective observational study, promoted by Fondazione ICONA in collaboration with clinical centers and community-based organizations. The coordinating enrolling center is INMI "L. Spallanzani" IRCCS in Rome. Participating Centers: * 49 university and hospital-based centers across Italy; * 4 non-clinical checkpoints offering PrEP screening, prescription, and follow-up. Study Population Adults (≥18 years) who are HIV-negative, sexually active, and considered eligible for PrEP per national or international guidelines, including both new and current PrEP users. Inclusion Criteria * Age ≥18 years; * Negative HIV test at enrollment; * Willingness to initiate or continue PrEP; * Informed consent provided. Exclusion Criteria * HIV infection or strong suspicion of infection; * Contraindications to PrEP medications; Known allergy to PrEP components; Refusal to comply with study procedures.