Pubmed Medication Set

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PMID- 26833669

OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180308
LR - 20220311
IS - 2042-7174 (Electronic)
IS - 0961-7671 (Linking)
VI - 25
IP - 3
DP - 2017 Jun
TI - A systematic review of electronic multi-compartment medication devices with
reminder systems for improving adherence to self-administered medications.
PG - 185-194
LID - 10.1111/ijpp.12242 [doi]
AB - BACKGROUND: Many patients experience difficulties adhering to medication
regimes.
For people who forget or get confused about medication, there are products to
help them such as multi-compartment medication devices (MMDs). Some of these,
known as electronic MMDs (eMMDs), use audible and/or visual signals to prompt
the
patient when to take medication, dispense medications, give instructions to
the
patient, and contact a caregiver (mobile Internet or text to a carer) as
needed.
AIM: To systematically review the literature on the use of eMMDs, to
determine
what evidence for their effectiveness is available. METHODS: A comprehensive
literature search of 10 databases, plus an Internet search and hand searching
was
conducted, using the MeSH terms reminder systems/patient
compliance/medication
adherence. There were no date restrictions. Inclusion criteria were patients
in
any community setting, in any country and with no restrictions of age,
gender,
ethnicity or medical condition, using an eMMD. Peer-reviewed quantitative or
qualitative studies of any design were included. RESULTS: Of 805 abstracts
identified and 99 full text papers retrieved, six met the inclusion criteria.
Five of the studies reported adherence to medication regimes; one reported
design
factors to improve adherence. Adherence varied by the context of the
reminders,
the target group and usability of the devices. The studies were small scale
and
only one was a well conducted randomised controlled trial. CONCLUSION:
Overall
methodological quality of the studies was poor. Although positive effects on
adherence were reported further, rigorously conducted, studies are needed to
inform the use of eMMDs.
CI - © 2016 Royal Pharmaceutical Society.
FAU - Paterson, Mary
AU - Paterson M
AD - e-Health Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
FAU - Kinnear, Moira
AU - Kinnear M
AD - NHS Lothian Pharmacy Service, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, UK.
FAU - Bond, Christine
AU - Bond C
AD - Centre for Academic Primary Care, Polwarth Building West Block, Aberdeen, UK.
FAU - McKinstry, Brian
AU - McKinstry B
AD - e-Health Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
AD - Edinburgh Health Services Research Unit, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh,
UK.
LA - eng
GR - CZH/4/968/CSO_/Chief Scientist Office/United Kingdom
PT - Journal Article
PT - Meta-Analysis
PT - Review
PT - Systematic Review
DEP - 20160201
PL - England
TA - Int J Pharm Pract
JT - The International journal of pharmacy practice
JID - 9204243
SB - IM
MH - Electronics
MH - *Equipment and Supplies
MH - Humans
MH - *Medication Adherence
MH - *Patient Compliance
MH - *Reminder Systems
MH - Self Administration/*instrumentation/methods
MH - Treatment Outcome
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - medication device
OT - patient adherence
OT - reminder systems
EDAT- 2016/02/03 06:00
MHDA- 2018/03/09 06:00
CRDT- 2016/02/03 06:00
PHST- 2015/10/25 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2015/10/25 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2016/02/03 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/03/09 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2016/02/03 06:00 [entrez]
AID - 10.1111/ijpp.12242 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Int J Pharm Pract. 2017 Jun;25(3):185-194. doi: 10.1111/ijpp.12242. Epub 2016
Feb
1.

PMID- 35195534
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220330
LR - 20220531
IS - 1438-8871 (Electronic)
IS - 1439-4456 (Print)
IS - 1438-8871 (Linking)
VI - 24
IP - 2
DP - 2022 Feb 23
TI - Digital Health Technologies to Improve Medication Adherence and Treatment
Outcomes in Patients With Tuberculosis: Systematic Review of Randomized
Controlled Trials.
PG - e33062
LID - 10.2196/33062 [doi]
LID - e33062
AB - BACKGROUND: Nonadherence to medication in tuberculosis (TB) hampers optimal
treatment outcomes. Digital health technology (DHT) seems to be a promising
approach to managing problems of nonadherence to medication and improving
treatment outcomes. OBJECTIVE: This paper systematically reviews the effect
of
DHT in improving medication adherence and treatment outcomes in patients with
TB.
METHODS: A literature search in PubMed and Cochrane databases was conducted.
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that analyzed the effect of DHT
interventions
on medication adherence outcomes (treatment completion, treatment adherence,
missed doses, and noncompleted rate) and treatment outcomes (cure rate and
smear
conversion) were included. Adult patients with either active or latent TB
infection were included. The Jadad score was used for evaluating the study
quality. The PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and
Meta-Analyses) guideline was followed to report study findings. RESULTS: In
all,
16 RCTs were selected from 552 studies found, and 6 types of DHT
interventions
for TB were identified: 3 RCTs examined video directly observed therapy
(VDOT), 1
examined video-observed therapy (VOT), 1 examined an ingestible sensor, 1
examined phone call reminders, 2 examined medication monitor boxes, and 8
examined SMS text message reminders. The outcomes used were treatment
adherence,
including treatment completion, treatment adherence, missed dose, and
noncompleted rate, as well as clinical outcomes, including cure rate and
smear
conversion. In treatment completion, 4 RCTs (VDOT, VOT, ingestible sensor,
SMS
reminder) found significant effects, with odds ratios and relative risks
(RRs)
ranging from 1.10 to 7.69. Treatment adherence was increased in 1 study by
SMS
reminders (RR 1.05; 95% CI 1.04-1.06), and missed dose was reduced in 1 study
by
a medication monitor box (mean ratio 0.58; 95% CI 0.42-0.79). In contrast, 3
RCTs
of VDOT and 3 RCTs of SMS reminders did not find significant effects for
treatment completion. Moreover, no improvement was found in treatment
adherence
in 1 RCT of VDOT, missed dose in 1 RCT of SMS reminder, and noncompleted rate
in
1 RCT of a monitor box, and 2 RCTs of SMS reminders. For clinical outcomes
such
as cure rate, 2 RCTs reported that phone calls (RR 1.30; 95% CI 1.07-1.59)
and
SMS reminders (OR 2.47; 95% CI 1.13-5.43) significantly affected cure rates.
However, 3 RCTs found that SMS reminders did not have a significant impact on
cure rate or smear conversion. CONCLUSIONS: It was found that DHT
interventions
can be a promising approach. However, the interventions exhibited variable
effects regarding effect direction and the extent of improving TB medication
adherence and clinical outcomes. Developing DHT interventions with
personalized
feedback is required to have a consistent and beneficial effect on medication
adherence and outcomes among patients with TB.
CI - ©Abdurahman Ridho, Sofa D Alfian, Job F M van Boven, Jutti Levita, Esin Aki
Yalcin, Ly Le, Jan-Willem Alffenaar, Eelko Hak, Rizky Abdulah, Ivan S
Pradipta.
Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research
(https://www.jmir.org), 23.02.2022.
FAU - Ridho, Abdurahman
AU - Ridho A
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-8251-0332
AD - Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
AD - Doctor Program in Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Universitas Padjadjaran,
Sumedang, Indonesia.
FAU - Alfian, Sofa D
AU - Alfian SD
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-5419-8938
AD - Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
AD - Center of Excellence in Higher Education for Pharmaceutical Care Innovation,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
FAU - van Boven, Job F M
AU - van Boven JFM
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-2368-2262
AD - Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacology, University Medical Center
Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
AD - Medication Adherence Expertise Center of the Northern Netherlands, Groningen,
Netherlands.
FAU - Levita, Jutti
AU - Levita J
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-4578-4174
AD - Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
AD - Center of Excellence in Higher Education for Pharmaceutical Care Innovation,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
FAU - Yalcin, Esin Aki
AU - Yalcin EA
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-1560-710X
AD - Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Faculty of Pharmacy, Ankara
University,
Ankara, Turkey.
FAU - Le, Ly
AU - Le L
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-3182-0007
AD - Vingroup Big Data Institute, Hanoi, Vietnam.
FAU - Alffenaar, Jan-Willem
AU - Alffenaar JW
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-6703-0288
AD - Faculty of Medicine and Health, School of Pharmacy, University of Sydney,
Sydney,
Australia.
AD - Sydney Institute for Infectious Diseases, Sydney, Australia.
AD - Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
FAU - Hak, Eelko
AU - Hak E
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0003-0849-7210
AD - Pharmacotherapy, Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacoeconomics, Research
Institute
of Pharmacy, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
FAU - Abdulah, Rizky
AU - Abdulah R
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-8779-6421
AD - Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
AD - Center of Excellence in Higher Education for Pharmaceutical Care Innovation,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
FAU - Pradipta, Ivan S
AU - Pradipta IS
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0002-7151-0783
AD - Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmacy,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
AD - Center of Excellence in Higher Education for Pharmaceutical Care Innovation,
Universitas Padjadjaran, Sumedang, Indonesia.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PT - Review
PT - Systematic Review
DEP - 20220223
PL - Canada
TA - J Med Internet Res
JT - Journal of medical Internet research
JID - 100959882
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Biomedical Technology
MH - *Cell Phone
MH - Humans
MH - Medication Adherence
MH - Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
MH - Reminder Systems
MH - *Text Messaging
MH - Treatment Outcome
MH - *Tuberculosis
PMC - PMC8908199
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - digital health
OT - eHealth
OT - intervention
OT - medication adherence technology
OT - nonadherence
OT - systematic review
OT - treatment outcomes
OT - tuberculosis
COIS- Conflicts of Interest: None declared.
EDAT- 2022/02/24 06:00
MHDA- 2022/03/31 06:00
CRDT- 2022/02/23 12:26
PHST- 2021/08/26 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2022/01/07 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/11/30 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2022/02/23 12:26 [entrez]
PHST- 2022/02/24 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/03/31 06:00 [medline]
AID - v24i2e33062 [pii]
AID - 10.2196/33062 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - J Med Internet Res. 2022 Feb 23;24(2):e33062. doi: 10.2196/33062.
PMID- 27533408
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20170417
LR - 20170417
IS - 2047-9018 (Electronic)
IS - 0029-6570 (Linking)
VI - 30
IP - 51
DP - 2016 Aug 17
TI - Pill Reminder.
PG - 32
LID - 10.7748/ns.30.51.32.s37 [doi]
AB - This easy-to-use app sets reminders for users to take their medication.
FAU - Haidrani, Layla
AU - Haidrani L
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PL - England
TA - Nurs Stand
JT - Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)
JID - 9012906
MH - *Drug Therapy
MH - *Mobile Applications
MH - *Reminder Systems
MH - United Kingdom
EDAT- 2016/08/18 06:00
MHDA- 2017/04/18 06:00
CRDT- 2016/08/18 06:00
PHST- 2016/08/18 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2016/08/18 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2017/04/18 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.7748/ns.30.51.32.s37 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Nurs Stand. 2016 Aug 17;30(51):32. doi: 10.7748/ns.30.51.32.s37.

PMID- 34953618
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20220628
LR - 20220823
IS - 1873-5134 (Electronic)
IS - 0738-3991 (Linking)
VI - 105
IP - 8
DP - 2022 Aug
TI - Accountability in reminder-based adherence interventions: A review.
PG - 2645-2652
LID - S0738-3991(21)00786-2 [pii]
LID - 10.1016/j.pec.2021.12.009 [doi]
AB - OBJECTIVE: Interventions to elicit accountability capitalize on social
behaviors
to improve adherence but are distinct from reminders. However, little is
known
about the impact of accountability in reminder-based adherence interventions.
Through a literature review, we aim to identify the frequency and
effectiveness
of accountability in reminder-based intervention studies. METHODS: PubMed and
PsycArticles were searched for reminder-based adherence studies. Articles
were
categorized as reminder-only or reminder with accountability studies. Studies
were characterized by outcome measures, and differences between control and
intervention groups were compared for studies that used electronic monitoring
devices. RESULTS: 165 studies met the inclusion criteria; 154 used reminders
without accountability (93%). 79 of the 154 reminder-only studies (51%)
improved
adherence in intervention groups compared to controls. Eleven of the 165
studies
(6.6%) included an accountability aspect. The intervention group had better
adherence than controls in 10 out of the 11 reminder with accountability
studies
(91%). CONCLUSIONS: Although distinct from reminders, accountability can be
incorporated in reminder-based interventions. However, it is not commonly
included in reminder-based interventions. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: It is
important
to consider accountability's effects on encouraging patient medication
adherence.
The addition of accountability interventions may further boost adherence, but
few
studies currently incorporate these types of interventions.
CI - Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
FAU - Salisbury, Katherine R
AU - Salisbury KR
AD - Center for Dermatology Research, Department of Dermatology, Wake Forest
School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA. Electronic address: [email protected].
FAU - Ranpariya, Varun K
AU - Ranpariya VK
AD - Center for Dermatology Research, Department of Dermatology, Wake Forest
School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA.
FAU - Feldman, Steven R
AU - Feldman SR
AD - Center for Dermatology Research, Department of Dermatology, Wake Forest
School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA; Department of Pathology, Wake Forest School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA; Department of Social Sciences & Health Policy,
Wake
Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, USA; Department of Dermatology,
University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Review
DEP - 20211215
PL - Ireland
TA - Patient Educ Couns
JT - Patient education and counseling
JID - 8406280
CIN - Patient Educ Couns. 2022 Aug;105(8):2635-2636. PMID: 35667936
MH - Humans
MH - *Medication Adherence
MH - *Reminder Systems
MH - Social Responsibility
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Accountability
OT - Adherence
OT - Behavior
OT - Digital interventions
OT - Reminders
EDAT- 2021/12/27 06:00
MHDA- 2022/06/29 06:00
CRDT- 2021/12/26 20:25
PHST- 2021/05/18 00:00 [received]
PHST- 2021/12/09 00:00 [revised]
PHST- 2021/12/12 00:00 [accepted]
PHST- 2021/12/27 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2022/06/29 06:00 [medline]
PHST- 2021/12/26 20:25 [entrez]
AID - S0738-3991(21)00786-2 [pii]
AID - 10.1016/j.pec.2021.12.009 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Patient Educ Couns. 2022 Aug;105(8):2645-2652. doi:
10.1016/j.pec.2021.12.009.
Epub 2021 Dec 15.

PMID- 28993388
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180601
LR - 20220321
IS - 2044-6055 (Electronic)
IS - 2044-6055 (Linking)
VI - 7
IP - 10
DP - 2017 Oct 8
TI - MEDication reminder APPs to improve medication adherence in Coronary Heart
Disease (MedApp-CHD) Study: a randomised controlled trial protocol.
PG - e017540
LID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017540 [doi]
LID - e017540
AB - INTRODUCTION: The growing number of smartphone health applications available
in
the app stores makes these apps a promising tool to help reduce the global
problem of non-adherence to long-term medications. However, to date, there is
limited evidence that available medication reminder apps are effective. This
study aims to determine the impact of medication reminder apps on adherence
to
cardiovascular medication when compared with usual care for people with
coronary
heart disease (CHD) and to determine whether an advanced app compared with a
basic app is associated with higher adherence. METHODS AND ANALYSIS:
Randomised
controlled trial with follow-up at 3 months to evaluate the feasibility and
effectiveness of medication reminder apps on medication adherence compared
with
usual care. An estimated sample size of 156 patients with CHD will be
randomised
to one of three groups (usual care group, basic medication reminder app group
and
advanced medication reminder app group). The usual care group will receive
standard care for CHD with no access to a medication reminder app. The basic
medication reminder app group will have access to a medication reminder app
with
a basic feature of providing simple daily reminders with no interactivity.
The
advanced medication reminder app group will have access to a medication
reminder
app with additional interactive and customisable features. The primary
outcome is
medication adherence measured by the eight-item Morisky Medication Adherence
Scale at 3 months. Secondary outcomes include clinical measurements of blood
pressure and cholesterol levels, and medication knowledge. A process
evaluation
will also be performed to assess the feasibility of the intervention by
evaluating the acceptability, utility and engagement with the apps. ETHICS
AND
DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval has been obtained from the Western Sydney
Local
Health Network Human Research Ethics Committee (AU/RED/HREC/1/WMEAD/3). Study
findings will be disseminated via usual scientific forums. TRIAL REGISTRATION
NUMBER: ACTRN12616000661471; Pre-results.
CI - © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text
of
the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless
otherwise expressly granted.
FAU - Santo, Karla
AU - Santo K
AUID- ORCID: 0000-0001-9047-8865
AD - Cardiovascular Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney,
Australia.
AD - Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
FAU - Chow, Clara K
AU - Chow CK
AD - Cardiovascular Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney,
Australia.
AD - Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
AD - Department of Cardiology, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
FAU - Thiagalingam, Aravinda
AU - Thiagalingam A
AD - Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
AD - Department of Cardiology, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
AD - Cardio-respiratory Division, Westmead Institute for Medical Research, Sydney,
Australia.
FAU - Rogers, Kris
AU - Rogers K
AD - Statistics Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney,
Australia.
FAU - Chalmers, John
AU - Chalmers J
AD - Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
AD - Professorial Unit, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, Australia.
FAU - Redfern, Julie
AU - Redfern J
AD - Cardiovascular Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney,
Australia.
AD - Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Randomized Controlled Trial
DEP - 20171008
PL - England
TA - BMJ Open
JT - BMJ open
JID - 101552874
SB - IM
MH - Clinical Protocols
MH - Coronary Disease/*drug therapy
MH - Feasibility Studies
MH - Humans
MH - Medication Adherence/*statistics & numerical data
MH - *Mobile Applications
MH - Reminder Systems/*instrumentation
MH - Self Report
MH - *Smartphone
PMC - PMC5640083
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Medication adherence
OT - applications
OT - apps
OT - coronary heart disease
OT - eHealth
OT - mHealth
OT - medication compliance
OT - mobile phone
OT - randomised controlled trial
OT - smartphone
COIS- Competing interests: None declared.
EDAT- 2017/10/11 06:00
MHDA- 2018/06/02 06:00
CRDT- 2017/10/11 06:00
PHST- 2017/10/11 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/10/11 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/06/02 06:00 [medline]
AID - bmjopen-2017-017540 [pii]
AID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017540 [doi]
PST - epublish
SO - BMJ Open. 2017 Oct 8;7(10):e017540. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017540.

PMID- 24050614
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20140826
LR - 20220321
IS - 1556-3669 (Electronic)
IS - 1530-5627 (Linking)
VI - 19
IP - 11
DP - 2013 Nov
TI - Medication reminder service for mobile phones: an open feasibility study in
patients with Parkinson's disease.
PG - 888-90
LID - 10.1089/tmj.2013.0014 [doi]
AB - Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder in which drug dosing
regimens become increasingly complicated with the progression of the disease.
This poses a significant risk of nonadherence to drug dosing and a failure in
treatment response. We hypothesized that a medication reminder delivered by
short
message service (SMS) could be one way to ameliorate the problem of
medication
errors. We conducted an open feasibility study in 50 patients with advanced
PD.
The subjects set up the process to receive reminders by a Web tool, after
which
they started to receive automatically transmitted text messages as a
medication
reminder for 4 weeks. In total, 35 of 50 subjects (70.0%) were able to set up
the
reminder system without any help. The majority (69%) of the subjects rated
the
set-up process as "very easy" or "easy." Almost all (41 subjects, 91%) felt
that
SMS reminders worked well for them, and only 4 subjects (9%) felt that SMS
texts
were totally valueless. Almost half of the subjects (22 of 45, 49%)
considered
that there were clear benefits, and an additional 17 subjects (38%) enjoyed
some
benefits in using the medication reminder system. Our results indicate that
an
SMS medication reminder system is a feasible method, even in subjects with
advanced PD.
FAU - Keränen, Tapani
AU - Keränen T
AD - 1 Department of Pharmacy, University of Eastern Finland , Kuopio, Finland .
FAU - Liikkanen, Sammeli
AU - Liikkanen S
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
DEP - 20130919
PL - United States
TA - Telemed J E Health
JT - Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American
Telemedicine Association
JID - 100959949
RN - 0 (Antiparkinson Agents)
SB - IM
MH - Adult
MH - Aged
MH - Antiparkinson Agents/*administration & dosage
MH - *Cell Phone
MH - Feasibility Studies
MH - Female
MH - Humans
MH - Male
MH - *Medication Adherence
MH - Middle Aged
MH - Parkinson Disease/*drug therapy
MH - *Reminder Systems
EDAT- 2013/09/21 06:00
MHDA- 2014/08/27 06:00
CRDT- 2013/09/21 06:00
PHST- 2013/09/21 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2013/09/21 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2014/08/27 06:00 [medline]
AID - 10.1089/tmj.2013.0014 [doi]
PST - ppublish
SO - Telemed J E Health. 2013 Nov;19(11):888-90. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2013.0014. Epub
2013
Sep 19.

PMID- 28423757
OWN - NLM
STAT- MEDLINE
DCOM- 20180419
LR - 20220311
IS - 1879-8365 (Electronic)
IS - 0926-9630 (Linking)
VI - 235
DP - 2017
TI - A Medication Reminder Mobile App: Does It Work for Different Age Ranges.
PG - 68-72
AB - Successful medication adherence particularly in elderly with chronic diseases
will improve their self-management. Medication reminder systems could be
useful
to improve this adherence. This study consists of two phases, designing a
mobile
medical app based on Android platform and then its evaluation. To develop
this
application, first, the use case scenarios have been hypothesized in
partnership
with health professionals and patients used to take medications daily.
Unified
Modeling Language was used to model the use cases. The evaluation was
performed
with usability testing and efficacy testing. The results show that the app
was
well accepted both in young people and older adults. Engaging target users
and
health professionals in the conception and development of a health-related
app
could have better results in the usability and the efficacy of the app.
FAU - Fallah, Mina
AU - Fallah M
AD - School of Allied Medical Science, Tehran University of Medical Sciences,
Tehran,
Iran.
FAU - Yasini, Mobin
AU - Yasini M
AD - DMD santé, Research and development department, Paris, France.
LA - eng
PT - Journal Article
PL - Netherlands
TA - Stud Health Technol Inform
JT - Studies in health technology and informatics
JID - 9214582
MH - Age Factors
MH - Humans
MH - *Medication Adherence
MH - Middle Aged
MH - *Mobile Applications
MH - *Reminder Systems
MH - Self Care
MH - User-Computer Interface
OTO - NOTNLM
OT - Mobile Applications
OT - Reminder System
OT - mHealth
OT - patient adherence
EDAT- 2017/04/21 06:00
MHDA- 2018/04/20 06:00
CRDT- 2017/04/21 06:00
PHST- 2017/04/21 06:00 [entrez]
PHST- 2017/04/21 06:00 [pubmed]
PHST- 2018/04/20 06:00 [medline]
PST - ppublish
SO - Stud Health Technol Inform. 2017;235:68-72.

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