MedPath

Digital Health for Medication Adherence Among African Americans With Hypertension

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Hypertension
Registration Number
NCT05009004
Lead Sponsor
Environment and Health Group, Inc.
Brief Summary

The proposed Phase 1 project aims to develop and test Memento.HTN, an individually-tailored, culturally sensitive digital health intervention comprised of a provider platform and linked patient SMS (short message service) text system to promote medication adherence among African Americans with hypertension (HTN), a group that suffers from disproportionate HTN morbidity and mortality. Memento.HTN overcomes access barriers on the part of patients and adherence support implementation barriers on the part of healthcare teams and systems. Memento.HTN is innovative in three key ways: 1) it is the first-ever linked digital provider platform and patient SMS text system for HTN medication adherence; 2) it is culturally-tailored for African Americans with HTN; and 3) it has unique monitoring functionality allowing providers to monitor individual patient adherence, support 'new start' patients, and track group adherence rates by drug class, pill format, and patient demographics.

Detailed Description

Abstract: Under the leadership of Patricia Weitzman, PhD, a multicultural, multidisciplinary team of clinicians and researchers will collaborate to develop, formatively test, and evaluate the short-effectiveness of a digital provider platform, called Memento.HTN, that is integrated with a patient SMS text system, and designed to support medication adherence by African Americans with hypertension (HTN). HTN is more common and more destructive for African Americans than for any other ethnic group. More than half of African American adults, about 15 million people, have HTN. Furthermore, African Americans are 4 times less likely to adhere to HTN medications compared to their white counterparts. Tailored approaches to reduce the racial gap in HTN morbidity and mortality, particularly those that support medication adherence, are needed in primary care. Such approaches must overcome barriers due to cost or geographic distance that can prevent African American patients from accessing adherence support. These approaches must also overcome barriers to the delivery of adherence support that stem from healthcare systems themselves. Importantly, HTN is one of most common co-morbidities in Covid19 hospitalizations, particularly for African Americans (CDC 2020).

Moreover, media coverage of a possible link between certain HTN meds, called RAAS inhibitors, and severe Covid19 outcomes may have alarmed HTN patients about the safety of their meds. As a result, the ACC (March, 2020) promptly issued guidelines recommending all patients adhere to HTN meds during the pandemic unless advised by their physicians, as there is no evidence of a link between HTN drugs and Covid19 severity. Thus, in the time of Covid19, supporting medication adherence of African Americans with HTN is extremely urgent. Memento.HTN is innovative in three key ways: 1) To our knowledge, it is the first-ever linked digital provider platform and patient SMS text system for HTN medication adherence. 2) It is culturally-tailored for African Americans with HTN. 3) It has unique monitoring functionality allowing providers to monitor individual patient adherence; support 'new start' patients, who are at increased risk for non-adherence; and track group adherence rates by drug class, pill format, and patient demographics, which have never been included in any digital med adherence intervention. Thus, the Memento.HTN system greatly simplifies and facilitates provider delivery of adherence support to patients, while enhancing their clinical therapeutics.

The provider platform sends patients interactive SMS-text pill reminders plus culturally-sensitive motivational, educational, spiritual/stress-supportive, and customizable texts, along with texts targeting intentional non-adherence and Covid19-related concerns. Texts go directly to patient cellphones (no mobile app needed), making the intervention accessible to patients who do not possess smartphones. Importantly, Memento allows 2-way texting communication between providers and patients, and automatically alerts providers when a patient has a clinically-significant pill lapse. Memento has significant commercial potential, as EHG has already developed plans for multiple digital adherence interventions that will be marketed together to clinics serving large numbers of at-risk patients. This B2B business model can generate large increases in revenues for customers, making our products attractive from both a financial and health perspective.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
22
Inclusion Criteria

Self-identify as African American, age 18 & older, diagnosed with hypertension and on meds for it, own a cellphone (basic or smart) -

Exclusion Criteria

Participation in other clinical research; undergoing cancer treatment; pregnancy; end stage renal disease

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Wilson Self Report Medication Adherence Scale6 weeks

The self-reported medication adherence scare, developed by Wilson et al. (2016), is designed to assess self reported mediation adherence. The total scale ranges from a minimum score = 0 to a maximum score = 299.9. Higher score means better medication adherence.

Hypertension Medication Adherence Self-efficacy Scale (MASES)6 weeks

The Hypertension MASES scale measures self efficacy for adhering hypertension medications. The scale ranges from a minimum total score = 0 to a maximum total score = 13. Higher score means greater medication adherence self efficacy.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Perceived Stress Scale6 weeks

The perceived stress burden scale, Cohen (1983) measures perceived stress levels. The scale ranges from a minimum total score = 0 to a maximum total score = 40. Higher total scores mean higher perceived stress.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Environment and Health Group

🇺🇸

Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

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