Can wireless text messaging improve adherence to preventive activities? Results of a randomised controlled trial

OBJECTIVE To determine the effectiveness of cell phone wireless text messaging for improving adherence to a healthy behaviour. DESIGN A randomised, unblinded, controlled trial was conducted with 102 subjects, 18 years or older, each having a cell phone and willing to take 1 vitamin C pill per day for 1 month for preventive reasons. Intervention group participants received text messaging reminders and were asked to acknowledge receiving their messages after taking the vitamins, whereas control group subjects had no text messaging activity. MEASUREMENTS Self-reported adherence and the number of participant text messages acknowledging vitamins taken. RESULTS Both groups reported an increased adherence after the trial: by 246% for the intervention group and by 131% for the control group. There was a non-significant difference between the two groups at endpoint: an average difference of 0.8 between the number of pills missed in the last week of the trial (2.5 out of 7 in the intervention and 3.3 out of 7 in the control group) with a power of 0.54. The study revealed a significant correlation (coefficient=-0.352, sig.=0.01) between the average number of text messaging acknowledgements sent by the intervention group participants and the number of pills they reported missed during the last week of the trial. CONCLUSION This was a small randomised controlled trial with inconclusive but encouraging results. It suggests a new approach in addressing insufficient adherence in outpatient conditions and shows that the use of information technology tools for compliance warrants further research.

[1]  R. Brian Haynes,et al.  Compliance in Health Care , 1979 .

[2]  Irina Cleemput,et al.  A review of the literature on the economics of noncompliance. Room for methodological improvement. , 2002, Health policy.

[3]  Neal Devitt,et al.  The rational clinical examination. , 1992, JAMA.

[4]  C J McDonald,et al.  Effects of computer reminders for influenza vaccination on morbidity during influenza epidemics. , 1992, M.D. computing : computers in medical practice.

[5]  Mary J Wills,et al.  Do u smoke after txt? Results of a randomised trial of smoking cessation using mobile phone text messaging , 2005, Tobacco Control.

[6]  B. Svarstad,et al.  Effects of pharmacist monitoring on patient satisfaction with antidepressant medication therapy. , 2002, Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association.

[7]  Owen Dyer,et al.  Patients will be reminded of appointments by text messages , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[8]  R. Haynes,et al.  Is this patient taking the treatment as prescribed , 1993 .

[9]  R Brian Haynes,et al.  Helping patients follow prescribed treatment: clinical applications. , 2002, JAMA.

[10]  B. Svarstad,et al.  The Brief Medication Questionnaire: a tool for screening patient adherence and barriers to adherence. , 1999, Patient education and counseling.

[11]  John Weinman,et al.  Medicine in a multi-cultural society: the effect of cultural background on beliefs about medications. , 2004, Social science & medicine.

[12]  Jaakko Kujala,et al.  The impact of patient-physician web messaging on healthcare service provision , 2008, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[13]  H. Mcdonald,et al.  Interventions to enhance patient adherence to medication prescriptions: scientific review. , 2002, JAMA.

[14]  Gordon H. Guyatt,et al.  Clinical Epidemiology: How to Do Clinical Practice Research , 1991 .

[15]  Mihail Cocosila,et al.  A framework for mobile healthcare answers to chronically ill outpatient non-adherence. , 2005, Informatics in primary care.

[16]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Telecare for patients with type 1 diabetes and inadequate glycemic control: a randomized controlled trial and meta-analysis. , 2004, Diabetes care.

[17]  K. A. McKibbon,et al.  Systematic review of randomised trials of interventions to assist patients to follow prescriptions for medications , 1996, The Lancet.

[18]  C. Crowther,et al.  Vitamin E supplementation in pregnancy (review). , 2005 .

[19]  Chirk Jenn Ng,et al.  The use of text messaging to improve attendance in primary care: a randomized controlled trial. , 2006, Family practice.

[20]  Sandra van Dulmen,et al.  Furthering patient adherence: A position paper of the international expert forum on patient adherence based on an internet forum discussion , 2008, BMC health services research.

[21]  Wanda Pratt,et al.  Patients as actors: The patient's role in detecting, preventing, and recovering from medical errors , 2007, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[22]  Chung-Chih Lin,et al.  A pervasive health monitoring service system based on ubiquitous network technology , 2008, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[23]  M. Pitts,et al.  New technology and partner notification - why aren't we using them? , 2005, International journal of STD & AIDS.

[24]  Charles Safran,et al.  Health care in the information society , 2002, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[25]  Chien-Tsai Liu,et al.  Development and evaluation of a patient-oriented education system for diabetes management , 2007, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[26]  R B Haynes,et al.  Interventions to enhance medication adherence. , 2005, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[27]  G. W. Snedecor Statistical Methods , 1964 .

[28]  C. Guinovart,et al.  The role of mobile phones in improving vaccination rates in travelers. , 2004, Preventive medicine.

[29]  Ronald Neville,et al.  Mobile phone text messaging can help young people manage asthma , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[30]  J. Weinman,et al.  The beliefs about medicines questionnaire: The development and evaluation of a new method for assessing the cognitive representation of medication , 1999 .

[31]  V. Franklin,et al.  "Sweet Talk": text messaging support for intensive insulin therapy for young people with diabetes. , 2003, Diabetes technology & therapeutics.

[32]  Elske Ammenwerth,et al.  Health care in the information society. A prognosis for the year 2013 , 2002, Int. J. Medical Informatics.