Permanent record · RIR–2040
Evaluating Mobile Health Messaging for Primary Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Moderate-Risk Patient Populations
This study evaluates a text-message-based intervention (TextMe2) aimed at improving lifestyle factors and medication adherence in patients with moderate-to-high cardiovascular risk.
To what extent does a structured lifestyle-focused text messaging programme improve modifiable cardiovascular risk factors in primary prevention patients?
Knowledge gap
What remains worth asking
Evidence remains limited regarding the long-term efficacy of automated mobile health interventions in reducing multi-factorial cardiovascular risk in primary care settings.
Potential contribution
Why it may matter
Provides a scalable, low-cost digital health framework for managing noncommunicable diseases through patient-centered behavioral modification.
Academic placement
OECD fields and topic tags
Scope: Primary care cardiology patients with moderate-to-high cardiovascular risk. · Method signals: Randomised Controlled Trial, Intention-to-treat analysis
Possible study pathways
One question, different levels
Implementation of digital health interventions in clinical practice.
Longitudinal analysis of behavioral change in mobile health trials.
Qualification signal
88/100
- Focuses on primary prevention rather than secondary management.
- Requires robust clinical trial oversight.
- Open-access scholarly source and DOI metadata verified
Provenance
Research Idea Registry curation
- DOI and bibliographic metadata independently resolved
- Open-access status verified
- The research direction is transparently marked as AI-inferred
APA 7 source
Klimis, H., Thiagalingam, A., & Chow, C. K. (2020). Text messages for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: the TextMe2 randomised controlled trial protocol. BMJ Open, 10(4), e036767. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-036767
Paper abstract and discussion context; AI-inferred direction
Open source ↗