INcentives and ReMINDers to Improve Long-term Medication Adherence (INMIND)

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of TrialsClinicalTrials.gov
Year 2025
Low medication adherence when initiating antiretroviral treatment (ART) is a key barrier to HIV virologic suppression, resulting in avoidable cases of drug resistance, death, and viral transmission. Routinized pill-taking can lead to successful long-term ART adherence, and short-term behavioral economics-based supports are a novel way to overcome the limited success of existing routinization interventions. This study proposes to test this combined approach for promoting long-term ART adherence using a Stage III Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial (SMART) design in one of the largest HIV clinics in Uganda to identify the most cost-effective adaptive intervention that if found effective is generalizable to other settings and other chronic diseases.
Epistemonikos ID: fd3c4afe466e8237503dcb4af85af8ad94787144
First added on: Apr 30, 2025