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Therapeutic failure, poor quality of life and high economic costs have been linked to poor adherence to medication in Type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. This paper aims to assess patients’ glycemic control, knowledge of T2D and adherence to medications, and evaluate the impact of mobile telephone-based intervention on these indices. A one-year retrospective review of pharmacy refill records was followed by a 6-months’ randomized controlled intervention conducted among 121 T2D patients in a secondary health care facility in Nigeria. Participants were assigned to control (n = 60) and intervention (n = 61) groups. The intervention comprised twice-weekly short message service (SMS) follow-up messaging to the intervention group alongside usual healthcare services. Control group received no SMS. Primary (HbA1c) and secondary (knowledge and adherence) outcome indicators were measured and compared pre- and post-intervention. The same copy of questionnaire was administered at baseline and post-intervention to both groups. Chi-square test was used to examine association of variables while two-sample t-test was conducted to compare mean pre- and post- intervention scores in both groups at p0.001) on the 8-point Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-8). The study concluded that patients initially had poor glycemic control, fair knowledge of T2D and low adherence to medications. SMS intervention significantly improved all three indices. Policy reforms in healthcare financing is recommended for sustainable provision of mhealth follow-up in diabetes care.
Adesokun et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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