- 1 in 3 Children Now Suffer From Chronic Illness
- No Link Between COVID Vaccine During Pregnancy And Birth Defects, Study Says
- Death Risk Higher Among People With Arthritis And COPD
- Depression, Anxiety Common Among Chronic Pain Patients
- Steep Decline In Fertility Among U.S. Women Younger Than 30
- Time Of Day, Year Matters For Asthma Testing
- Early Detection of Colon Cancer Is Critical for Women
- Scientists Develop Rapid Bird Flu Detector for Airborne Test
- Parents Feel They Are Lacking Information About Bird Flu
- Harvard Profs Sue Trump Administration Over Removal of LGBTQ Research From Website
Text Messages Remind People to Take Medications

Text reminders improve the chances that patients will stick with their medication regimen, a new study finds.
About one-third of people don’t take their medications as prescribed, either because they forget or because they’re uncertain about the benefits or potential harms of the drugs, according to the researchers.
“An important and overlooked problem in medicine is the failure to take prescribed medication. The results of this trial show that text message reminders help prevent this in a simple and effective way. More than just a reminder, the texts provided the link to identify patients who needed help,” lead author Dr. David Wald, a professor and cardiologist at Queen Mary University of London in England, said in a university news release.
The study included more than 300 people who were prescribed blood pressure and/or cholesterol-lowering medications. They were divided into two groups, some who received text messages and others who did not.
Those in the text group received messages asking if they had taken their medication that day. The messages were sent every day for two weeks, every other day for two weeks, and then weekly for six months.
If they didn’t reply to the messages, they were phoned and offered help.
Only 9 percent of patients in the text message group stopped taking their medications, compared with 25 percent of patients who did not receive text messages, according to the study.
The study was published Dec. 5 in the journal PLOS One.
“The health implications of these results are considerable from both an economic and a health gain perspective. The method is not limited to cardiovascular disease prevention and could be used for patients on treatment for other chronic diseases,” David Taylor, professor emeritus, pharmaceutical and public health policy, University College London, said in the news release.
More information
The U.S. National Institute of General Medical Sciences has more about taking medicines.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.