Medication adherence is defined as the extent to which a patient takes his or her medication as prescribed by their healthcare provider. One third to one half of all patients in the United States do not take their medication as directed, resulting in nearly $100B in avoidable hospital costs per year. Recent efforts to improve medication adherence in patients with multiple comorbidities have turned to case management and disease management programs. Connected monitoring devices offer an alternative- or supplement- to frequent nurse visits and outreach. These devices enable frequent monitoring and intervention but can also generate large volumes of data that can be difficult for care teams to manage. The present study explores the use of one such device- a technology-enabled, connected pillbox. Given the continued emphasis on bending the cost curve in US healthcare, clinical validation of tools that may improve the management of costly chronic diseases, such as diabetes, is essential.
Randomized Control Trial Patients in the research treatment group receive pre-filled, 3x7 disposable trays that separate their medication by dose and time (e.g. morning, afternoon, evening). These pre-filled trays are inserted into a connected, weekly pillbox that detects when pills are removed from its wells. Using this information, TowerView Health system is able to send automated text messages or phone reminders to patients to take forgotten or ignored medication doses. Medication adherence data from deployed pillboxes populates a software platform, which a research coordinator can access. Patients who miss 3 consecutive doses or 5 doses out of 12 over a 4-day period trigger an alert for the study research coordinator who can contact the patient via phone call. The research coordinator follows a scripted motivational interview in his or her outreach to determine the etiology of non-adherence. Patients reporting worrisome symptoms will be instructed to contact their provider directly and/or go to the emergency room for immediate attention. The investigator acknowledges that the current study actually involves multiple interventions: 1. The pre-filled medication trays are provided by a pharmacist, which overcomes medication access issues as well as the inconvenience of manually organizing medications. 2. The electronic pillbox, which monitors adherence that triggers text message or phone reminders in instances where patients forget or ignore medication doses 3. Research coordinator alerts, which trigger outreach events that employ a motivational interview in order to improve patient adherence.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
50
Randomized Control Trial Patients in the research treatment group receive pre-filled, 3x7 disposable trays that separate their medication by dose and time (e.g. morning, afternoon, evening). These pre-filled trays are inserted into a connected, weekly pillbox that detects when pills are removed from its wells.
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Percent of Participants With Adherence at Month 6
The primary outcome of interest in the present study is improvement in adherence. We will determine if a multi-modal intervention focused on improving medication adherence among adults who were previously non-adherent results in improved medication adherence over a 6-month interval averaged across months 1 to 6. This will be reported as the percent persistent on therapy at 6 months across the three conditions (diabetes, HTN, hyperlipidemia)
Time frame: 6-month interval
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