
December 2005 Cover
|
 |
Johns Hopkins University Division of Infectious Disease researchers found that a pocket-sized device helps ensure that HIV patients with slightly impaired memory comply with their medication regimens.
The portable device, nicknamed "Jerry" by users, gives electronic-voice reminders, flashes a light, and tells patients the exact dosages and medications to take at a given time. It is rechargeable and weighs approximately as much as a cell phone. It has computer
programming to keep track of patients' compliance, and doctors can download and print reports to monitor patient adherence.
Fifty-eight patients completed the four-month study. Half were given Jerry and attended adherence-counseling sessions. The other half received only counseling. The investigators recruited patients with either normal memory or mild memory impairment. Both groups
had better adherence with Jerry, but the memory-impaired participants showed greater improvement. There was not a significant variance between the normal-memory participant groups who had and did not have Jerry, researchers said. Subjects with Jerry took their medication
80 percent of the time; subjects without Jerry did so 65 percent of the time.
Of the 31 memory-impaired patients, those with Jerry had a 77 percent adherence rate, while those without had a 57 percent adherence rate, a 20 percent difference. Participants received plasma viral load tests throughout the study, but the authors found no
significant difference in lessening the HIV amount between those with or without Jerry.
Editor's Note: from the AIDS Weekly and Law
You are not logged in.
No comments yet, but
click here to be the first to comment on this
HIV Digest!
|