The citizen as coproducer of health
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Transcript of The citizen as coproducer of health
FP7-ICT-2009.5.1 – Support Action
Directions for ICT Research in Disease Prevention
This project is partially funded under the 7th Framework Programme by the European Commission
The Citizen as Co-producer of Health & Conceptual Framework for Chronic Disease
Management
Niels BoyeUniversity of Aarhus, Denmark
www.preve-eu.org
Client Centred ApproachPatient Centred Medicine
Ambient Assisted Living
Health Service Delivery
Maturity of ICT
Citizen as object
User as OperatorExpert SystemsCorporate Centred
User as UserLayman SystemsIndividual Centred
Citizen as co-Producer of Health
ContemporaryState of the Artin ICT andEmpowerment
Model & Concepts
Citizen as proactive subject
Disease prevention
Disease compensation
(Disease cure)
Assisted living
The Citizen as Co-producer of Health –enabled by ICT
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“Biological age” (“years”)
0
100 %
Patient
0
100
(100%Citizen)
AAL
Telemed
Preven-tion
Demand side
Supply side
The Present
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0
100 %
Patient
0
100
(100% Citizen)
Tele-
medicine
D
D
Chronic
Disease
Management
“Biological age” (“years”)
D
AAL
D
Preven-
tionand
Lifestyle
Society Hospital
The Future
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Personal Guidance Services (PGS)
Conceptual Aims of “the Citizen as Co-producer of Health Model"
• Information and patients as resources• Nature, Nurture, and collaboration with institutionalized
health care• Personalized management of prevention (and care of
chronic diseases) – in a citizen context• Multilevel ICT-modeling of health and disease
encapsulated in to personal devices –
From: “Background document for the Consultation meeting
on potential European Large scale Action (ELSA) on eHealth”
European Commission “ICT for Health Unit, H1, 28.08.2009
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Hospital
Pharmacy
Specialist-
centre
General
Practice
Home
Restaurant
Super-
market
Museum
Sports centre
Farm
Work
Car
The PGS Service Architecture diabetes as example
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Diabetic
Personal
device
Exercise
Health providers
Commodity service providers
Data
Information
Knowledge
The Personal Guidance Systems Service model
diabetes as example
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Data
Information
Knowledge access
The Machine-room of the “Citizen as Co-producer of Health”the ECO-system building blocks
Choice
architectures
Co-
producers
HealthGPS(digital avatar)
Political, social, economic
Platform services (security, ID)
PHR
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Decision support (information flows)
EHR
Quality
Assurance
HMO/
Region
Clinical
encounter
Healthcare
Co-production
Health-PGSPHR and
digital avatar
Research Patient-NGO
Research/
Pharmaceutical Co
Hospital
Data- and
Information
flow
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Decision Support Present service model
• Contemporary service model (provider push) of prevention:
• Non-specific lifestyle modifications• Primary prevention (e.g. immunisations)• Secondary prevention – (e.g. screening programs)• Tertiary prevention of complications to disease
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Prevention in the Co-Producer Model context
• From the citizen and co-production of health point of view there is no distinction between primary, secondary and tertiary prevention
• It is behaviour planning and execution on the basis of personal-context, evidence-, and knowledge-driven ICT-augmented decisions
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Evidence Based Associations between Risk Factors and Conditions
Type 2-diabetes
Preventable cancer
Cardiovascular disease
Osteoporosis
Musculoskeletal disorders
Hypersensitivity disorders
Mental disorders
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Tobacco smoking
Alcohol consumption
Diet
Physical activity
Obesity
Accidents
Working environment
Environmental factors
Diseases and Disorders Risk Factors
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Reduction i CVD
disease risk (%)
(95% CI)
Reference
Wine
(150 ml/day)
32 ( 23-41) Circulation 2002;105:2836-44
Fish
(114 gr 4x/week)
14 (8-19) Am J Cardiol 2004;93:1119-23
Dark chocolate
(100g/day)
21 (14-27) JAMA 2003;290:1029-30
Fruit and vegetables
(400 g/day)
21 (14-27) Lancet 2002;359:1969-74
Garlic
(2.7 g/day)
25 (21-27) Arch Intern Med 2001;161:813-24
Almonds
(68 g/day)
13 (11-14) Circulation 2002;106:1327-32
Am J Clin Nutr 2003;77:1379-84
Combined effect 76 (63-84)
Franco OH et al. BMJ 2004;329:1447-50.
CVD=Cardiovascular Disease,CI = Confidence interval
A “polymeal” of the above would cost 21.60 Great British Pounds per week (2004)and give an average increase in life expectancy of 6.6 years for men and 4.8 years for women And give men 9.0 years more life without heart disease for women (8.1 years).
Decision support – in preventionExample: Evidence of food having impact in Cardio Vascular Disease
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Citizen Modifiable Risk Factors
Co-production of Disease PreventionConnections between Risk Factors and Conditions
Type 2-diabetes
Preventable cancer
Cardiovascular disease
Osteoporosis
Musculoskeletal disorders
Hypersensitivity disorders
Mental disorders
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
ConditionsTobacco smoking
Alcohol consumption
Diet
Physical inactivity
Obesity
Accidents
Working environment
Environmental factors
Citizen Modifiable Risk Factors
Non-Modifiable Risk Factors
Family history and gender