At a glance
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A Pilot Study of Mobile Directly Observed Therapy (mDOT) for Immunosuppressant Adherence in Adolescent Kidney Transplant Recipients
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating mHealth Intervention for Medication Adherence and Kidney Transplant. Completed, enrolled 1 participant across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The investigators are interested in whether or not the use of a mobile health (mHealth) application increases the rate of immunosuppression medication adherence among adolescent kidney transplant recipients. The investigators aim to test this by recruiting adolescent (ages 14-21) kidney transplant recipients to use an mHealth application to record themselves taking their immunosuppression medications, and tracking medication adherence over time. The study population will be approximately 50 adolescent kidney transplant recipients at the Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The video DOT app will allow transplant recipients to see their medication regimen, record themselves taking every dose, report side effects or symptoms, visualize their treatment progress, access educational content, and track appointments. This information is encrypted and transmitted to a HIPAA-secure web portal for providers to review.