TY - JOUR
T1 - Delivery of integrated diabetes care using logistics and information technology – The Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) program
AU - Chan, Juliana C.N.
AU - Ozaki, Risa
AU - Luk, Andrea
AU - Kong, Alice P.S.
AU - Ma, Ronald C.W.
AU - Chow, Francis C.C.
AU - Wong, Patrick
AU - Wong, Rebecca
AU - Chung, Harriet
AU - Chiu, Cherry
AU - Wolthers, Troels
AU - Tong, Peter C.Y.
AU - Ko, Gary T.C.
AU - So, Wing yee
AU - Lyubomirsky, Greg
AU - The JADE Collaborative Study Group
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd.
PY - 2014/12
Y1 - 2014/12
N2 - Diabetes is a global epidemic, and many affected individuals are
undiagnosed, untreated, or uncontrolled. The silent and multi-system
nature of diabetes and its complications, with complex care protocols,
are often associated with omission of periodic assessments, clinical
inertia, poor treatment compliance, and care fragmentation. These
barriers at the system, patient, and care-provider levels have resulted
in poor control of risk factors and under-usage of potentially
life-saving medications such as statins and renin–angiotensin system
inhibitors. However, in the clinical trial setting, use of nurses and
protocol with frequent contact and regular monitoring have resulted in
marked differences in event rates compared to epidemiological data
collected in the real-world setting. The phenotypic heterogeneity and
cognitive–psychological–behavioral needs of people with diabetes call
for regular risk stratification to personalize care. Quality improvement
initiatives targeted at patient education, task delegation, case
management, and self-care promotion had the largest effect size in
improving cardio-metabolic risk factors. The Joint Asia Diabetes
Evaluation (JADE) program is an innovative care prototype that advocates
a change in clinic setting and workflow, coordinated by a doctor–nurse
team and augmented by a web-based portal, which incorporates care
protocols and a validated risk engine to provide decision support and
regular feedback. By using logistics and information technology,
supported by a network of health-care professionals to provide
integrated, holistic, and evidence-based care, the JADE Program aims to
establish a high-quality regional diabetes database to reflect the
status of diabetes care in real-world practice, confirm efficacy data,
and identify unmet needs. Through collaborative efforts, we shall
evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and cost-effectiveness of this
“high tech, soft touch” model to make diabetes and chronic disease care
more accessible, affordable, and sustainable.
AB - Diabetes is a global epidemic, and many affected individuals are
undiagnosed, untreated, or uncontrolled. The silent and multi-system
nature of diabetes and its complications, with complex care protocols,
are often associated with omission of periodic assessments, clinical
inertia, poor treatment compliance, and care fragmentation. These
barriers at the system, patient, and care-provider levels have resulted
in poor control of risk factors and under-usage of potentially
life-saving medications such as statins and renin–angiotensin system
inhibitors. However, in the clinical trial setting, use of nurses and
protocol with frequent contact and regular monitoring have resulted in
marked differences in event rates compared to epidemiological data
collected in the real-world setting. The phenotypic heterogeneity and
cognitive–psychological–behavioral needs of people with diabetes call
for regular risk stratification to personalize care. Quality improvement
initiatives targeted at patient education, task delegation, case
management, and self-care promotion had the largest effect size in
improving cardio-metabolic risk factors. The Joint Asia Diabetes
Evaluation (JADE) program is an innovative care prototype that advocates
a change in clinic setting and workflow, coordinated by a doctor–nurse
team and augmented by a web-based portal, which incorporates care
protocols and a validated risk engine to provide decision support and
regular feedback. By using logistics and information technology,
supported by a network of health-care professionals to provide
integrated, holistic, and evidence-based care, the JADE Program aims to
establish a high-quality regional diabetes database to reflect the
status of diabetes care in real-world practice, confirm efficacy data,
and identify unmet needs. Through collaborative efforts, we shall
evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and cost-effectiveness of this
“high tech, soft touch” model to make diabetes and chronic disease care
more accessible, affordable, and sustainable.
KW - Information technology
KW - Integrated diabetes care
KW - JADE
KW - Logistics
KW - Quality improvement
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84921460959
U2 - 10.1016/S0168-8227(14)70733-8
DO - 10.1016/S0168-8227(14)70733-8
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 25550057
AN - SCOPUS:84921460959
SN - 0168-8227
VL - 106
SP - S295-S304
JO - Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice
JF - Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice
IS - S2
ER -