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Efficacy of Mobile Phone Short Message Service (SMS) Reminder and Consultation on Asthma Control

Evaluate the Clinical Efficacy of Mobile Phone Short Message Service (SMS) Reminder and Consultation on the Self-management and Outcomes of Poorly-controlled Asthma: a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02189616
Enrollment
360
Registered
2014-07-14
Start date
2014-07-31
Completion date
2014-12-31
Last updated
2014-08-19

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Asthma

Keywords

asthma management, SMS reminder, SMS consultation

Brief summary

Asthma is the disease being studied. The main objective of this study is to assess the clinical efficacy of mobile phone short message service (SMS) reminder and consultation on the self-management and outcomes of poorly controlled asthma which is first diagnosed in a time period of 3 months. The secondary objective is to explore the cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness of the proposed intervention. Aims: The main aim of this study is to assist asthma patients to practice asthma self-management at home by sending reminders and responding to patients' consultations with mobile phone short message service (SMS), which will eventually help them to control their asthma, and prevent asthma exacerbation. Thus, the ultimate goal of this proposed study is to improve patient health outcome via enhancing patient-physician interaction through mobile phone short message service (SMS) that is low-cost and could be followed easily by the patients and their physicians. The hypothesis is that asthma patients who receive weekly text message reminders to educate them and reinforce adherence will have better asthma outcome, such as asthma control, while the intervention integrating patient consultation and reminders by SMS improve asthma outcome even more. The investigators further hypothesize that these subjects under intervention will have an improvement in secondary measures including quality of life and patient satisfaction. The investigators also anticipate that such an approach in asthma management will be cost-effective.

Detailed description

After examined for their eligibility and recruited into this study at outpatient service, all participants have their case records which contain their baseline data and receive the same standard asthma education(including basic knowledge about asthma, how to use their medicine, what to do when an asthma attack happens and when to come back for their disease review and so on). Each patient is given a paper asthma diary and a peak expiratory flow(PEF) measurer for free. In addition, they are told what intervention they will receive and revised face-to-face one month after the beginning of intervention. After the 3-month study period, when they return to the hospitals, they will return the asthma diaries, be asked to fill in the questionnaires and take pulmonary function tests.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALSMS reminder

send weekly mobile phone short message reminders to the intervention group

OTHERSMS consultation

told patients to consult qualified asthma nurses by SMS when they need

patients are asked to fill in their paper asthma diary daily for 3 months

Sponsors

Baoji Central Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Hanzhong Central Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Yan'an University Affiliated Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Xijing Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Physician diagnosed uncontrolled or partly-controlled asthma by Global Initiative for Asthma(GINA) standard. 2. At least 6 months asthma history. 3. Ownership of a mobile phone and currently using the text messaging service. 4. Age between 18 and 65 years old. 5. Willingness to participate in this study. 6. Willing to sign the written informed consent to take part in the study.

Exclusion criteria

1. Inability to provide written informed consent or to fill in the paper asthma diary. 2. A history of smoking cigarettes for greater than ten pack years. 3. Other current or a history of severe comorbidity. 4. Being in other clinical trials.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
change in asthma control measured by Asthma Control Test(ACT)3 monthschange in asthma control measured by Asthma Control Test(ACT) between baseline and 3 months after randomization.
score of knowledge, attitude, and self efficacy asthma questionnaire (KASE-AQ)3 monthsscore of knowledge, attitude, and self efficacy asthma questionnaire (KASE-AQ) at baseline and 3 months

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Mini-asthma quality of life questionnaire (mini-AQLQ)3 monthsmini-AQLQ scores at baseline and 3 months after the randomization
asthma control3 monthschange of asthma control level indicated by symptom score, PEF and asthma exacerbations (asthma hospitalizations, emergency department visits, or oral corticosteroid dispensing) from baseline to the end of intervention(3 months)

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
cost effectiveness3 monthsThe cost effectiveness of SMS reminder and consultation interventions compared to controls without study interventions.

Countries

China

Contacts

Primary ContactJuan Wang, master
ddys1211@163.com18909233806

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026