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RecruitingMedication AdherenceHeart Failure

Improving Medication Adherence Using Family-focused and Literacy-sensitive Strategies

Eligible age

18+ yrs

Accepts

All genders

Locations

1 state

Healthy volunteers

Yes

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About this study

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.

Sponsor: Jia-Rong Wu

You may qualify if…

  • confirmed diagnosis of heart failure (HF), either systolic or diastolic HF
  • ave suboptimal medication adherence
  • have a care partner (CP) (either spouse, daughter/son, partner, other relative, friend) who is identified by the patient as the person most involved in HF care
  • willingness to have a CP be involved in their medication taking
  • have undergone evaluation of HF and prescribed stable doses of HF medications for at least 3 months
  • live in a setting where the patient is responsible for their ow medication administration
  • willing to use the SimpleMed+ (i.e., an electronic pillbox to measure objective medication adherence)
  • availability by phone

You may not qualify if…

  • cognitive impairment as indicated by having difficulties to understand and give informed consent
  • a recent hospitalization within 3 months of study enrollment
  • co-existing end-stage renal disease or terminal illness such as advanced malignancy, or any other condition with less than 1-year life expectancy
  • psychotic illness
  • current alcohol dependence or other substance abuse
  • inability to speak English or other communication barrier
  • currently or have received any similar self-care intervention recently in the past year
  • cognitive impairment as indicated by having difficulties to understand and give informed consent

Where it's recruiting

Kentucky

Lexington

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT05548413 · last updated 2026-05-05