Behavioral Economics and Medication Adherence for Hypertension: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: Nonadherence to antihypertensive medications is common. Mobile health (mHealth)-based behavioral economic interventions may improve adherence, but remain largely untested, especially in vulnerable populations. OBJECTIVE: The study sought to test whether an mHealth incentive lottery would lower systolic blood pressure (SBP) and improve adherence. METHODS: BETTER-BP (Behavioral Economics Trial To Enhance Regulation of Blood Pressure) was a randomized trial conducted in 3 safety-net clinics in New York City. Eligible participants were adults with hypertension prescribed at least 1 antihypertensive medication, with SBP >140 mm Hg, and poor self-reported adherence. In the intervention arm, an incentive lottery was administered via SMS messaging. All participants received passive adherence monitoring. The intervention lasted 6 months, with continued monitoring until 12 months. The primary clinical endpoint was change in SBP at 6 months. The primary process endpoint was adequate antihypertensive medication adherence (≥80% days adherent) from baseline to 6 months. RESULTS: Four-hundred participants (265 intervention:135 control) were enrolled with median age 57 years, 60.5% women, 61.5% Hispanic, and 20.3% non-Hispanic Black. Over 70% had Medicaid or no insurance. At 6 months, intervention arm participants were twice as likely to achieve adequate adherence (71% vs 34%; adjusted risk ratio: 2.04; 95% CI: 1.58-2.63), but there was no significant change in mean SBP (-6.7 mm Hg intervention vs -5.8 mm Hg control; P = 0.62). From 6 to 12 months, adherence was similar (31% intervention vs 26% control; adjusted risk ratio: 1.17; 95% CI: 0.83-1.65). CONCLUSIONS: In a diverse safety-net population, the BETTER-BP intervention doubled the rate of adequate antihypertensive medication adherence but did not reduce SBP at 6 months.