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RECRUITING
NCT05572177
NA

Feasibility of a Smartphone Application for Asthma Self-management

Sponsor: University of South Florida

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The primary goal of this project is to determine the feasibility, acceptability, and adherence of a smartphone application for improving asthma self-management in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT). The app is specifically designed to appeal to adolescents. Adolescents with persistent asthma will be randomized to receive: 1) standard-of-care or 2) the self-management app in addition to standard-of-care. Feasibility will be assessed by the ability to recruit and retain subjects, technical barriers to implementation, and the appropriateness of the intervention among adolescents and providers. The acceptability of the intervention will be determined by appraising perceived usefulness, entertainment, and ease of use of the app. Adherence to usage of the app over a 6-month period will be assessed by examining the frequency of app usage and the features that were used, and the extent of data regarding self-management that was entered. A secondary objective is to obtain preliminary estimates of effectiveness of the app on clinical outcomes (ACT score, spirometry, CHSA-C, exacerbations, and medication adherence) relative to standard-of-care. It is hypothesized that the app will result in a high level of adherence and will be a feasible and acceptable intervention to improve self-management among adolescents with persistent asthma.

Official title: Feasibility of MHealth Technology for Improving Self-Management and Adherence Among Asthmatic Adolescents

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

12 Years - 17 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

50

Start Date

2023-06-26

Completion Date

2025-07-31

Last Updated

2024-10-02

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

DEVICE

Asthma SMART

The intervention is a smartphone application to improve self-management of asthma designed to appeal to adolescents. The app integrates four components to facilitate asthma self-management: 1) self-monitoring of peak-flow and symptoms; 2) graphical health user interfaces with avatars, infographics, and rewards; 3) interactive educational materials; and 4) patient-provider interactions.

Locations (1)

University of South Florida

Tampa, Florida, United States