News-Medical.Net December 30, 2024
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

Patients with opioid use disorder can reduce their days of opioid use and stay in treatment longer when using a smartphone app as supportive therapy in combination with medication, a new study by The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) shows.

The cohort study of 600 underserved patients found that those who chose to use the app – which combines contingency management behavioral therapy and recovery support from peers – and alongside medication, reduced their days of opioid use by 35% compared with those treated with medication only. Additionally, app users remained in treatment nearly 19% longer than those treated with medication alone.

These findings suggest that augmenting medication for opioid...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
Got healthcare questions? Just ask Transcarent

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Apps, Digital Health, Patient / Consumer, Provider, Technology
Medicare insurers ranked by mobile app quality
How an App Store Approach Fuels Innovation and Efficiency in Healthcare
'The generation that created the internet is now our audience': SCAN Group prepares to launch first mobile app
Apple’s Vision Pro has a problem a year into its existence: Not enough apps
Research reveals concerning links between fitness apps and disordered eating

Share This Article