Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study

BackgroundResearch supports the use of mobile phone apps to promote medication adherence, but the use of and satisfaction with these apps among medically underserved patients with chronic illnesses remain unclear. ObjectiveThis study reports on the overall use of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christa Hartch, Mary S Dietrich, B Jeanette Lancaster, Shelagh A Mulvaney, Deonni P Stolldorf
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-01-01
Series:JMIR Human Factors
Online Access:https://humanfactors.jmir.org/2025/1/e63653
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841555894338322432
author Christa Hartch
Mary S Dietrich
B Jeanette Lancaster
Shelagh A Mulvaney
Deonni P Stolldorf
author_facet Christa Hartch
Mary S Dietrich
B Jeanette Lancaster
Shelagh A Mulvaney
Deonni P Stolldorf
author_sort Christa Hartch
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundResearch supports the use of mobile phone apps to promote medication adherence, but the use of and satisfaction with these apps among medically underserved patients with chronic illnesses remain unclear. ObjectiveThis study reports on the overall use of and satisfaction with a medication adherence app (Medisafe) in a medically underserved population. MethodsMedically underserved adults who received care for one or more chronic illnesses at a federally qualified health center (FQHC) were randomized to an intervention group in a larger randomized controlled trial and used the app for 1 month (n=30), after which they completed a web-based survey. Objective data on app usage were provided as secondary data by the app company. ResultsThe participants were very satisfied with the app, with all participants (30/30, 100%) somewhat or strongly agreeing that they would recommend the app to family and friends. Participants strongly agreed (28/30, 93%) that the reminders helped them remember to take their medications at the correct time each day, and they (28/30, 93%) found the app easy to use. Additional features accessed by some included educational features and the adherence report. Participants noted the helpfulness of having a medication list on their phones, and some used it during medication reconciliation at doctor visits. Use of the Medfriend feature, which alerts a social support person if a medication is missed, was low (n=2), but those who used it were very positive about the feature. ConclusionsA commercially available medication adherence app was found to be useful by participants, and they were satisfied with the app and the additional features provided. The use of medication adherence mobile phone apps has the potential to positively influence chronic disease management in a medically underserved population on a large scale. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT05098743; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05098743
format Article
id doaj-art-51bb8ee446a94c5d80daa843d8045f3f
institution Kabale University
issn 2292-9495
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series JMIR Human Factors
spelling doaj-art-51bb8ee446a94c5d80daa843d8045f3f2025-01-07T21:30:33ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Human Factors2292-94952025-01-0112e6365310.2196/63653Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey StudyChrista Hartchhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3267-6948Mary S Dietrichhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4474-0767B Jeanette Lancasterhttps://orcid.org/0009-0005-1929-8737Shelagh A Mulvaneyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1622-6744Deonni P Stolldorfhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1352-5397 BackgroundResearch supports the use of mobile phone apps to promote medication adherence, but the use of and satisfaction with these apps among medically underserved patients with chronic illnesses remain unclear. ObjectiveThis study reports on the overall use of and satisfaction with a medication adherence app (Medisafe) in a medically underserved population. MethodsMedically underserved adults who received care for one or more chronic illnesses at a federally qualified health center (FQHC) were randomized to an intervention group in a larger randomized controlled trial and used the app for 1 month (n=30), after which they completed a web-based survey. Objective data on app usage were provided as secondary data by the app company. ResultsThe participants were very satisfied with the app, with all participants (30/30, 100%) somewhat or strongly agreeing that they would recommend the app to family and friends. Participants strongly agreed (28/30, 93%) that the reminders helped them remember to take their medications at the correct time each day, and they (28/30, 93%) found the app easy to use. Additional features accessed by some included educational features and the adherence report. Participants noted the helpfulness of having a medication list on their phones, and some used it during medication reconciliation at doctor visits. Use of the Medfriend feature, which alerts a social support person if a medication is missed, was low (n=2), but those who used it were very positive about the feature. ConclusionsA commercially available medication adherence app was found to be useful by participants, and they were satisfied with the app and the additional features provided. The use of medication adherence mobile phone apps has the potential to positively influence chronic disease management in a medically underserved population on a large scale. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT05098743; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05098743https://humanfactors.jmir.org/2025/1/e63653
spellingShingle Christa Hartch
Mary S Dietrich
B Jeanette Lancaster
Shelagh A Mulvaney
Deonni P Stolldorf
Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
JMIR Human Factors
title Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
title_full Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
title_fullStr Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
title_full_unstemmed Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
title_short Satisfaction and Usability of a Commercially Available Medication Adherence App (Medisafe) Among Medically Underserved Patients With Chronic Illnesses: Survey Study
title_sort satisfaction and usability of a commercially available medication adherence app medisafe among medically underserved patients with chronic illnesses survey study
url https://humanfactors.jmir.org/2025/1/e63653
work_keys_str_mv AT christahartch satisfactionandusabilityofacommerciallyavailablemedicationadherenceappmedisafeamongmedicallyunderservedpatientswithchronicillnessessurveystudy
AT marysdietrich satisfactionandusabilityofacommerciallyavailablemedicationadherenceappmedisafeamongmedicallyunderservedpatientswithchronicillnessessurveystudy
AT bjeanettelancaster satisfactionandusabilityofacommerciallyavailablemedicationadherenceappmedisafeamongmedicallyunderservedpatientswithchronicillnessessurveystudy
AT shelaghamulvaney satisfactionandusabilityofacommerciallyavailablemedicationadherenceappmedisafeamongmedicallyunderservedpatientswithchronicillnessessurveystudy
AT deonnipstolldorf satisfactionandusabilityofacommerciallyavailablemedicationadherenceappmedisafeamongmedicallyunderservedpatientswithchronicillnessessurveystudy