posted on 2024-01-23, 11:27authored byDavid Kerr, David C Klonoff, Richard M Bergenstal, Pratik Choudhary, Linong Ji
Objectives
Diabetes management presents a substantial burden to individuals living with the condition and their families, healthcare professionals, and healthcare systems. Although an increasing number of digital tools are available to assist with tasks such as blood glucose monitoring and insulin dose calculation, multiple persistent barriers continue to prevent their optimal use.
Methods
As a guide to creating an equitable connected digital diabetes ecosystem, we propose a roadmap with key milestones that need to be achieved along the way.
Results
During the Coronavirus 2019 pandemic, there was an increased use of digital tools to support diabetes care, but at the same time, the pandemic also highlighted problems of inequities in access to and use of these same technologies. Based on these observations, a connected diabetes ecosystem should incorporate and optimize the use of existing treatments and technologies, integrate tasks such as glucose monitoring, data analysis, and insulin dose calculations, and lead to improved and equitable health outcomes.
Conclusions
Development of this ecosystem will require overcoming multiple obstacles, including interoperability and data security concerns. However, an integrated system would optimize existing devices, technologies and treatments to improve help to improve outcomes.
History
Author affiliation
Diabetes Research Centre, University of Leicester
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Endocrine practice : official journal of the American College of Endocrinology and the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists