Skip to content
Open access · US-GOV via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial

Digital Technology to Support Adherence to Hypertension Medications for Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment

Authors not listed

University of Arizona · 2024

Abstract

The purpose of the bpMedManage study is to rigorously test the efficacy of a smartphone technology to help improve high blood pressure medication adherence among older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in a 16-week randomized controlled trial. A total of 100 older adults will be recruited. There will be two treatment arms, bpMedManage-S and bpMedManage-P with 50 participants in each arm. Participants randomized into the bpMEDManage-S intervention arm will use a smartphone application with medication reminders plus receive education with standardized information on hypertension and antihypertensive medications on the education portal. Participants in the bpMedManage-P group will use a smartphone to receive education with standardized information on hypertension and antihypertensive medications on an education portal. Both groups will complete baseline assessments followed by 4 weeks of medication adherence monitoring. At the end of the adherence monitoring period, participants will be randomized into one of the two treatment arms. Immediate outcomes on primary and secondary measures will be assessed 4 weeks after beginning of the intervention. Follow-up outcomes will be assessed 12 weeks after the beginning of the intervention.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-05-29 MST

Cite this

APA
Anonymous. (2024). Digital Technology to Support Adherence to Hypertension Medications for Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment. <em>University of Arizona</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06307574
Vancouver
Anonymous. Digital Technology to Support Adherence to Hypertension Medications for Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment. University of Arizona. 2024.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2024Digita, title = {Digital Technology to Support Adherence to Hypertension Medications for Older Adults With Mild Cognitive Impairment}, author = {Anonymous}, journal = {University of Arizona}, year = {2024}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings