ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Testing a Smart Medication Dispenser (Mobili®) to Help People With Chronic Conditions Take Their Medicine (MobiMAd@PT RCT)

L

Lusofona University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Dose Administration Aids
Diabetes
Polypharmacy
Medication Adherence
Cardiovascular Diseases
Technology in Health

Treatments

Device: Independent use of the Mobili® Device by patients, overseen by pharmacists

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07175545
LusofonaU
2023.11968.PEX (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Medication adherence is one of the biggest challenges faced by healthcare systems, especially among people with multiple chronic diseases who take several medications daily. Studies show that up to half of patients do not take their medication as prescribed, which can compromise treatment effectiveness, increase complications, and lead to waste of healthcare resources.

In this context, several solutions have been developed to help patients organize their therapy, such as dose administration aids (DAAs) used in pharmacies. However, many of these systems are manual, inflexible, or difficult to use.

This study is part of the MobiMAd@PT project, which will evaluate Mobili®, a portable digital medication dispenser developed in Norway. Mobili® allows patients to automatically receive the right medication at the right time and comes with a real-time monitoring system, enabling healthcare professionals to detect missed doses and provide timely support.

The main goal of this study is to assess the effectiveness of Mobili® in improving medication adherence among patients with polypharmacy in Portugal and to understand whether this type of technology can be useful and applicable in the context of Portuguese community pharmacies. Your participation will contribute to the development of new ways to manage health at home, with the support of pharmacists and technology.

Full description

Medication non-adherence is a critical challenge for global health systems, with evidence suggesting that up to half of patients may not follow their prescribed medication. Given the rates of medication non-adherence and its detrimental effects on health outcomes and health systems sustainability, numerous Dose Administration Aids (DAA) interventions have been developed. Most of them are packaging and dosage modifications, either in single and manually prepared dosette boxes, or in multidose automated dispensing (MAD) systems, prepared in community or hospital pharmacies. However, in spite of their success, most MAD are cumbersome and lack long-term sustainability.

In an era where digital health technologies are reshaping healthcare delivery, this project introduces Mobili® in Portugal, a portable MAD system developed by the Norwegian start-up Medthings. Mobili combines portability, automated dose dispensing and real-time monitoring, facilitating a more manageable medication regimen for chronic patients.

This research project aims to explore the effectiveness of Mobili on medication adherence among chronic multimorbidity patients and its adaptability in a different health system. Achieving these aims will provide valuable insights into the deployment of technology-driven interventions in actual healthcare settings, potentially transforming digital adherence solutions for chronic patients. The CFIR 2.0 Implementation Research framework will guide the development of the research tasks.

The project comprises four tasks:

  1. Project management and dissemination;
  2. Training of participating pharmacists, and collection of feedback on adaptability to the Portuguese context, through focus groups prior to the implementation of the intervention;
  3. Assesing Mobili's efectiveness on medication adherence, through a randomized control trial (RCT) comparing Mobili users with a control group using existing DAAs;
  4. developing a protocol for a future large-scale study based on tasks 2 and 3 findings.

Task 3 will also assess secondary outcomes like patient satisfaction and quality of life through interviews, using both quantitative and qualitative methods for a comprehensive intervention evaluation. The insights gained during this project will lay the groundwork for a detailed study protocol to fully assess Mobili's effectiveness in enhancing medication adherence across Europe.

This project's findings will contribute to better understand the impact of digital health interventions on medication adherence, patients' health and healthcare systems' efficiency, and will be valuable to researchers in medication adherence and implementation science. The project also holds substantial scientific and commercial potential, through:

  • the deliver of a research protocol for a large-scale study to assess Mobili's clinical and economic value to European health systems
  • initial insights into a disruptive DAA service business model.

The successful real-world application of the project's outcomes could enhance medication adherence and patient management, promoting a culture of adherence within the community, significantly improving care quality and generating economic benefits for patients and health systems.

The project's success strategy centers on three pillars:

  1. leveraging the diverse expertise and experience within the team, with a strong support and commitment from the manufacturer of Mobili;
  2. integrating Design Science with participatory action research to enhance stakeholder engagement;
  3. establishing a core management team to enable a strong collaboration between scientific and clinical expertise, through regular project meetings.

The multidisciplinary research team, comprising experts in pharmaceutical services innovation, information system research, health communication, and organizational development, brings a wealth of experience from previous studies in pharmacy services, healthcare management, and digital medication adherence tools.

Enrollment

96 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 18 years and above
  • Non-institutionalized diabetes and cardiovascular disease patients
  • At least two medications in the therapeutic regimen
  • Requiring only regular oral medication that can be dispensed in the eDosette
  • Able to handle the use of technological devices (i.e. smartphones)

Exclusion criteria

  • Cognitive impairments preventing independent use of Mobili®
  • Patients using medicines that do not fit or are incompatible with being dispensed in the eDosette (i.e. some capsules, solutions, insulins or GLP-1 analogues, transdermal patches, eye-drops)
  • One participant per household

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

96 participants in 2 patient groups

Mobili® device (Intervention Group)
Experimental group
Description:
Group of patients using the Mobili® device
Treatment:
Device: Independent use of the Mobili® Device by patients, overseen by pharmacists
Placebo (Control Group)
No Intervention group
Description:
Group of patients using the current Dose Administration Aid system available in the pharmacy

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

João Pedro B Gregório, PharmD PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems