Journal of Primary Care & Community Health (Oct 2022)

Use of a Smartphone Medication Reminder Application to Support Emerging Adult Adherence to Non-Antibiotic Treatment for Viral Upper Respiratory Tract Infection

  • David L. Brinker,
  • Kasey A. Foley,
  • Yanmengqian Zhou,
  • Michelle Acevedo-Callejas,
  • Yuwei Li,
  • Erina L. Farrell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319221129732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Objective: This research study is a test of the efficacy of a smartphone-installed medication reminder application to support provider-recommended treatment plans for young adult patients who were seen for upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs) and were not prescribed an antibiotic. Methods: Two hundred seventy-five patients seen at a university student health center for URTI symptoms were randomly assigned to the medication reminder app intervention or a control group and then surveyed both 1 and 14 days after their medical visits with questions about the treatment plan, their satisfaction with medical care, and the electronic support tools. Results: Compared to the control condition, patients using the reminder app reported more adherence to provider-recommended treatment plans. Patients with lower social support availability benefited more from being provided with these tools. Conclusion: These findings suggest that medication reminder apps have utility for increasing patient adherence to non-antibiotic URTI treatment plans, particularly among patients who lack high-quality informational and tangible social support. Innovation: This study demonstrates innovation in use of the medication reminder app to promote antibiotic stewardship with young adult patients in primary care.