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Kabrina Moton, 16, of Cincinnati reads a text message reminding her to take her asthma medicine. She says she texts a lot, so it's easy to spot her reminder at 7 p.m. daily — and so far, she hasn't missed a dose.
Kabrina Moton, 16, of Cincinnati reads a text message reminding her to take her asthma medicine. She says she texts a lot, so it’s easy to spot her reminder at 7 p.m. daily — and so far, she hasn’t missed a dose.
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Getting your player ready...

WASHINGTON — 4gt yr meds? Getting kids to remember their medicine may be a text message away.

Cincinnati doctors are experimenting with texting to tackle a big problem: Tweens and teens too often do a lousy job of controlling chronic illnesses such as asthma, diabetes and kidney disease.

It’s a problem long recognized in adults, particularly for illnesses that can simmer without obvious symptoms until it’s too late. But only now are doctors realizing how tricky a time adolescence is for skipping meds, too.

Of necessity, parents start turning over more health responsibilities to their children at this age. It’s also an age of angst, sometimes rebellion — and an age when youths may most hate feeling different from their friends because of medication, special diets or other therapy.

“It’s a time of so much change in these kids’ lives,” says Dr. Marva Moxey-Mims, a specialist in pediatric kidney disease at the National Institutes of Health. “It’s very difficult when you’ve got a life-threatening illness to say, ‘Let them make their mistakes.’ ”

Kabrina Moton, 16, of Cincinnati knows she’ll start wheezing and need her inhaler when she plays basketball if she hasn’t taken her daily asthma pill.

Still, “one time I went a whole month without taking it,” she confesses. “It’s just work and school and being in and out of the house all the time. . . . When I would think about it, I wasn’t around it or I was out and I wouldn’t remember later on.”

Enter text messages.

Dr. Maria Britto, an asthma specialist at Cincinnati Children’s, noticed that even when she’s talking to adolescent patients perched on the clinic exam table, they’ll keep texting on their cellphones.

“You have to get in their face a little,” she says with a laugh.

But it sparked the idea for a study to see if a daily medication reminder via text message would improve kids’ asthma control — preventing full- blown attacks, improving school attendance, and decreasing doctor and emergency-room visits.

Pilot testing recently began, with a full study set for later this year.

Participants say what time they want the reminder, and a clinic volunteer types out the messages — words spelled out, no mimicking of kids’ text lingo.

Moton says she texts a lot, so it’s easy to spot her reminder at 7 p.m. daily — and so far, she hasn’t missed a dose.

“It always says, ‘Have a nice day,’ ” she says. “It makes me feel good about it.”

If the simple reminders work for asthma, they may for other diseases, too.

“We have the science (backing treatments),” Britto notes. “We just can’t figure out how to get the right drugs into the right kids’ bodies.”

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