Research Idea RegistryBrowse the registry →

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.

Open to researchQualified 88/100P4 provenance
Primary research question

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

Public HealthCardiologyDigital Health

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

Postgraduate diploma

Implementation of digital health interventions in clinical practice.

Research master’s

Longitudinal analysis of behavioral change in mobile health trials.

originalityModerate
methodologyAdvanced
Data accessModerate
ethicsAdvanced

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
The public contributor code contains no name or account email.

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 ↗