The proposed study is a pilot randomized clinical trial (RCT). Participants in the intervention arm will participate in a 90-day adherence promotion program based on the theory of behavioral economics and administered through the Wellth mobile phone application. Subjects will be provided a CleverCap® Lite BLE C035 smart pill bottle (electronic monitoring (EM), device) containing a 90-day supply of aspirin (90 pills) and those in the intervention arm will be offered $150 for app-based medication check-ins, which consist of uploading daily photos of pills at the time of administration through the Wellth app. Subjects will have $2 deducted from total rewards for each day that a medication check-in is missed. Subjects in the control arm will receive usual care and be monitored with the same EM device types used in the intervention arm.
Medication adherence is a quantifiable parameter detailing when and how consistently doses are taken. Elements of medication adherence include: 1) the proportion of prescribed drug taken or %PDT (primary outcome); 2) the proportion of days with the correct number of doses taken; 3) the proportion of doses taken on time, in relation to a prescription-defined time interval between successive doses; 4) the distribution of inter-dose intervals; 5) the number of drug holidays; and 6) the longest interval between two doses \[Vrijens et al. British journal of clinical pharmacology. 2012;73(5):691-705\]. Medication adherence will be assessed in all participants using EM technology manufactured by CleverCaps®. Electronic Monitoring (EM) is more sensitive, reliable and valid than other measurement techniques such as pill counts, self-reports, or clinical judgment \[Vrijens et al. Expert review of clinical pharmacology. 2014;7(5):633-644\]. In this study the investigators will monitor a single drug, aspirin, in MI patients prescribed aspirin on hospital discharge. In addition to measurement of medication adherence using an EM device, the investigators will measure adherence using the Wellth cell phone app in the intervention arm. Participants in the intervention arm will also be asked to track their medication-taking habits by uploading photos of their medications at the appropriate dosage times using the Wellth app. Readmissions will be measured using the EMR and by interview to capture events outside the Penn system. Events will be classified according to timing (e.g. 30-day readmission) and cause (e.g. cardiac, all-cause). This study is not designed to detect a statistically significant difference in readmissions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
130
Subjects receiving the Financial Incentive and Mobile Phone App will each participate in a 90-day adherence promotion program. When users first log in to the app, the screen will display an incentive of $150 that participants have earned by enrolling in the program. Participants will be told that each missed medication check-in will result in a $2 deduction from the account before it is paid out. Each $50 portion (minus any penalties) of the $150 incentive will be paid out in 30-day installments by remotely crediting a previously distributed debit card. Adherence will be measured simultaneously by app photos and CleverCap(R) electronic monitoring (EM) devices filled with a 90-day supply of aspirin. Claims data will be analyzed for a 90 day period to account for any hospital admissions.
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Medication Adherence
Better medication adherence at 90 days as Percentage of Doses Taken (%PDT) using CleverCap(R) electronic monitoring devices
Time frame: 90 Days
30-Day All-cause Readmissions
Average rates of hospital readmissions within 30 days assessed by medical record review and patient interviews
Time frame: 30 Days
90-Day All-cause Readmissions
Average rates of hospital readmissions within 90 days assessed by medical record review and patient interviews
Time frame: 90 Days
Medication adherence assessed using patient smartphone photos
% PDT will not differ between the app and electronic monitoring measurement approaches
Time frame: 90 Days
Self-reported self-care
Self-care of coronary heart disease inventory
Time frame: 90 Days
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