RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06569290

Refinement and Testing of Recruitment Methodology for Behavioral Medication Adherence Interventions Using Behavioral Science-based Approaches


Sponsor

Brigham and Women's Hospital

Enrollment

584 participants

Start Date

Mar 3, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The overarching goal of the proposed research is to prepare the clinical pharmacist intervention for sustainable implementation and dissemination. Because the effectiveness of the intervention has already been demonstrated in a NIH Stage Model IV trial, the investigators propose an Effectiveness-Implementation Type 3 Hybrid design, in which the primary focus is on testing different implementation methods, while secondarily observing clinical effects. The investigators' overarching hypothesis is to identify the most impactful elements of a behavioral theory-informed recruitment approach, which can be replicable across clinical settings. Accordingly, the investigators propose to perform testing of a behaviorally-informed recruitment approaches in a community-based setting. Like the previous Tele-Pharmacy Intervention to Improve Treatment Adherence (STIC2IT) trial (NCT02512276), participants will be English or Spanish speaking adults ≥18 years of age identified through the electronic health record (EHR) as having poor disease control and/or poor medication adherence for diabetes. The primary care physicians of eligible patients identified through the EHR will be contacted to opt-out any patients they wish not to be included. Patients will then be randomized to each of the following conditions, such that there will be 8 total arms: (1) inclusion of a mailer primer (yes/no), (2) the most successful recruitment letter from the preliminary study using prospect theory (versus the control letter), and (3) intensity of the intervention outreach (4 calls vs. 2 calls). The investigators plan to enroll 584 participants who meet the inclusion criteria, with 73 patients per each of the 8 study arms. Patients across all arms who agree to be scheduled will receive an appointment with one of the clinical pharmacists within the established BMC pharmacist program. The primary outcome will be completion of a clinical pharmacist appointment within 8 weeks after randomization. Key secondary outcomes will include scheduled visit rates, no-show rates for scheduled appointments, medication adherence over the 3-month follow-up, and clinical outcomes, including HbA1c levels measured using EHR data in the 3 months after randomization. The medication adherence and clinical outcomes will be used for the Aim 2 evaluation.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study focuses on improving how clinical pharmacists are recruited to help adults with diabetes who are struggling to take their medications as prescribed. Researchers are testing different combinations of outreach methods — including mailer letters, phone call frequency, and messaging strategies based on behavioral science — to find out which approach best encourages patients to schedule and attend a pharmacist appointment. Adults aged 18 or older who receive care at Boston Medical Center, speak English or Spanish, and have evidence of poor diabetes medication adherence or worsening blood sugar control may be eligible. Participants who agree to an appointment will meet with a clinical pharmacist, and the study tracks whether they attend, how well they take their medications over three months, and changes in blood sugar levels. This summary was prepared as patient-facing educational content using AI assistance.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

Interested in this trial?

Get notified about updates and connect with the research team.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALPrimer postcard

Inclusion of a mailed primer post card

BEHAVIORALControl recruitment letter

a recruitment letter without any behaviorally-informed language

BEHAVIORALBehavioral theory-informed recruitment letter (prospect theory)

the recruitment letter will use prospect theory and deliver a low risk, gain-framed behaviorally-informed message.

BEHAVIORAL2 phone calls

2 recruitment phone calls made by the call center

BEHAVIORAL4 phone calls

4 recruitment phone calls made by the call center


Locations(1)

Boston Medical Center

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov

For the most up-to-date information, visit the official listing.

Visit

NCT06569290


Related Trials