elevida, a complementary, RCT-Proven DTx for improved patient outcomes
Thank you for your interest in the elevida randomized controlled trial. Download the study below and learn:
- which methods were used to conduct the trial
- how the intervention affected its users over the course of 12 and 24 weeks
- what the results of the trial mean for the future of MS-Patients suffering from fatigue
- how this research can serve as a basis for further research on MS-related fatigue
Download the study for free
Catch us at ECTRIMS 2022
Don’t miss seeing us in person at another big event this fall: the 38th Congress of the European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis! We will be attending alongside our research partners, including the National MS Society, to share some exciting news related to disease-modifying DTx for MS Patients.
Who we are
GAIA AG is the worldwide leader in the development of evidence-based, safe and accessible digital therapeutics. GAIA'S DTx solutions offer the same effect sizes, similar safety profiles and equal levels of convenience as found in well-developed pharmaceutical solutions.
For more than 25 years we have been combining scientific, technological and therapeutic expertise under one roof. Our mission is to increase the quality of people’s wellbeing by helping them to restore and maintain their mental and physical health. The effectiveness of our products has been clinically proven in more than 20 RCTs and 2 meta-analyses.
Intended Purpose
elevida is intended to provide therapeutic methods and exercises based on evidence-based psychological and psychotherapeutic therapies for patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and comorbid fatigue (persistent tiredness respectively exhaustion), to help them manage their fatigue. elevida is intended as a self-application supplemental to care-as-usual for patients 18 years of age or older. elevida is neither intended to replace treatment provided by a health care provider nor to provide information which is used to take decisions with diagnosis or therapeutic purposes.
1Pöttgen J, et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2018;0:1–7. doi:10.1136/jnnp-2017-317463
