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Improving Medication Adherence Using Family-focused and Literacy-sensitive Strategies
Sponsor: Jia-Rong Wu
Summary
People with heart failure who do not take their medications as prescribed are at high risk of complications leading to hospitalization, death and poor quality of life. In the proposed intervention, nurses will use easy-to-understand language to coach patients and their care partners to help them work together and build skills to overcome their individual barriers to adherence in order to 1) improve and sustain patient medication adherence; 2) reduce hospitalization; 3) improve quality of life. If effective, this intervention will support long-term medication adherence, thus reducing hospitalizations related to heart failure and quality of life.
Official title: Improving Medication Adherence Using Family-focused and Literacy-sensitive Strategies in Patients With Heart Failure
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
328
Start Date
2023-01-04
Completion Date
2027-12-31
Last Updated
2024-05-16
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
FamLit
The FamLit (Family-focused and Literacy-sensitive strategy) is an interactive, multi-component intervention supported by the FamLit intervention Guide, including both spoken and printed materials written at a 4th-grade reading level for HF patients and their primary CPs.Three constructs guide the intervention, based on the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB): 1) develop patient and CP positive attitudes through HF instruction and teach-back; 2) form positive subjective norms through coaching to improve patient and CP communication, support, and teamwork; and 3) increase perceived behavioral control through coaching and role-playing to empower patients and CPs to overcome individual barriers to adherence. This intervention also includes use of the SimpleMed+ electronic pillbox.
Attention Control
Participants in this group will talk with an interventionist to discuss general health. This intervention also includes use of the SimpleMed+ electronic pillbox.
Locations (1)
Jia-Rong Wu
Lexington, Kentucky, United States