| Literature DB >> 24958355 |
Carly M Goldstein1, Emily C Gathright2, Mary A Dolansky3, John Gunstad4, Anthony Sterns5, Joseph D Redle6, Richard Josephson7, Joel W Hughes8.
Abstract
We conducted a feasibility study of a telehealth intervention (an electronic pill box) and an m-health intervention (an app on a smartphone) for improving medication adherence in older adults with heart failure. A secondary aim was to compare patient acceptance of the devices. The participants were 60 adults with HF (65% male). Their average age was 69 years and 83% were Caucasian. Patients were randomized using a 2 × 2 design to one of four groups: pillbox silent, pillbox reminding, smartphone silent, smartphone reminding. We examined adherence to 4 medications over 28 days. The overall adherence rate was 78% (SD 35). People with the telehealth device adhered 80% of the time and people with the smartphone adhered 76% of the time. Those who received reminders adhered 79% of the time, and those with passive medication reminder devices adhered 78% of the time, i.e. reminding did not improve adherence. Patients preferred the m-health approach. Future interventions may need to address other contributors to poor adherence such as motivation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24958355 PMCID: PMC6957063 DOI: 10.1177/1357633X14541039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Telemed Telecare ISSN: 1357-633X Impact factor: 6.184