10 Wireless health clinical trials

By: Brian Dolan | Nov 11, 2009        

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UKUnited Kingdom: Assessment of the Clinical Efficacy and Acceptability of the Think Positive (T+) Diabetes Management System in Insulin Requiring Diabetes

Principal Investigator: University College London Professor Stanton P. Newman

Sponsors and Collaborators:University College London Hospitals; University College, London; Department of Health

New telemedicine systems have been designed to assist people suffering from diabetes in the management of their chronic disease. More recently the focus has been moving to portable systems equipped with Bluetooth. This study consists of evaluating an application called the Think Positive (T+) diabetes management software. It is a randomized controlled trial designed to compare, over a nine month period, a group of patients receiving usual care with a group of patients using the T+ system. The objectives of the study are to investigate the extent to which this telemedicine application helps patients control their blood sugar levels (HbA1c), as well as the extent to which its users consider it to be acceptable. The impact of its use on factors such as diabetes self-care, health status, quality of life, self-confidence in diabetes management, fear of hypoglycemia and illness representations will also be examined. Because of the supplementary real-time support and feedback that T+ offers, its use should lead to better outcomes in diabetes management than usual care does.

Estimated Enrollment: 240
Study Start Date: August 2009
Estimated Study Completion Date: August 2012

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    [...] Sinai and Carespeak conducted are an important step in the process toward proven efficacy – MobiHealthNews rounded up 10 other wireless health clinical trials from around the world that also aimed to determine the efficacy of various wireless health systems. The GSM Association [...]

  • http://www.ctru.auckland.ac.nz robyn whittaker

    There are other places that trials can be registered – i am involved with three mobile phone clinical trials that are registered either in the UK or Australasia. One large text messaging programme to help people quit smoking in the UK (txt2stop), another quit smoking programme that uses video messaging by role models in NZ, and a depression prevention programme for teens that uses multimedia messaging and mobile websites in NZ. For more details http://www.ctru.auckland.ac.nz.