Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up
N/A Completed N=22 Supportive Care

Digital Health for Medication Adherence Among African Americans With Hypertension

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05009004 ↗
Enrolled (actual)
22
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Dec 2024
Primary outcomePrimary: Wilson Self Report Medication Adherence Scale — 91.86 units on a scale

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.

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Wilson Self Report Medication Adherence Scale
91.86
PRIMARY
Hypertension Medication Adherence Self-efficacy Scale (MASES)
5.95
SECONDARY
Perceived Stress Scale
15.05

Eligibility Criteria

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

-

View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05009004). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication. Informational only — not medical advice.

Back to search