| Epposi Optimal Chronic Care Model presented - to be piloted with EU and multi-stakeholder partners in 2012 |
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Epposi presented its second stage research findings on chronic conditions management and sought open inputs for its new Optimal Chronic Care Model at a conference in Brussels on 22 November, held at the Crowne Plaza Brussels Europa Hotel, which attracted almost 70 representatives of patients’ organisations, academic sciences, medical technology and pharmaceutical industries, payers, healthcare professionals, carers and employers, and observer partners in the EU institutions and national ministries.
Dr Paul Timmers, Director, Directorate H - ICT Addressing Societal Challenges, DG Information Society & Media, and Maria Iglesia-Gomez, Head of Unit, Innovation for Health and Consumers at DG Health and Consumers, the European Commission’s leads on the European Innovation Partnership in Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP-AHA) - and observer members of Epposi’s Advanced Innovation Programme in Chronic Conditions Management - jointly presented the next steps for the EIP in relation to chronic conditions, now that the Strategic Implementation Plan (SIP) has been approved.
Continuing to work with multi-stakeholder organisations like Epposi, “whose clear work programme, methodologies, benchmarking and standards-setting are extremely important for reliable evidence-gathering, as well as the clear support of national and regional authorities will be key to delivering the implementation phase of the EIP-AHA from 2012”, said Mrs Iglesia-Gomez.
Dr Timmers added that the focus of the implementation phase in relation to Care and Cure and horizontal actions (where Epposi, as an expert think tank, has supported the EIP-AHA Steering Committee to recently deliver its plan and recommendations) would move towards developing pilots at regional level to test and evaluate integrated care models (hospital-community-home settings), analyse and aggregate data and share evidence. The EU’s role has been to facilitate and connect partners (health and social care professionals, public and regional authorities, IT industry, patients’ organisations, civil society etc) and it is now up to them to take the work forward to help deliver improved health outcomes and better use of resources, which will require “certainly an attitude and approach to put patients at the centre”, he said.
Epposi’s Executive Director, Jacqueline Bowman-Busato, welcomed the move towards implementation and outlined where Epposi’s priorities and next steps for the model from 2012 could contribute:
She commented, “Delivering this programme of research and work in a multi-stakeholder environment has made us critically aware of the need to focus on how to ensure that the community elements can be taken up and really implemented at a community level, both for widely prevalent chronic conditions as well as those more specific patient groups living with a rare chronic condition. The Epposi ethos continues to be to strive to be ahead of the curve in bridging the gap between innovation and improved health outcomes. Epposi very much welcomes the Commission’s comments and looks forward to continuing to contribute in a meaningful, collaborative and practical manner with the EIP and also inputting into the EC Reflection process on the holistic management of chronic conditions over the course of 2012.”
Key research findings and outline model
Dr Andrea Pavlickova, Epposi’s Chronic Conditions Management Programme (AIP-CCM) Researcher, set out the scope of the research. The aim was to build a workable European model for chronic conditions management which took account of the medical, socio-economic and technology dimensions. The model is non-disease-specific but looked at the five most prevalent chronic disease areas in Europe - cardiovascular, neurological, diabetes, musculoskeletal and chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases – in order to assess the commonalities and gaps in care.
Ten countries - Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Scotland, Slovakia and Spain – were chosen for detailed study for their geographical and demographic diversity and different health systems to establish the evaluation checklist. This consists of four core domains:
and detailed indicators in order to draft a new European chronic care standard.
First simulation test The conference was also the first public simulation test of the model. All attendees took part using Decide, an EU-funded experiential learning tool to help organisations, individuals and public administrations find consensus and concrete outcomes to interlinked and multilevel challenges.
Using a serious gaming model especially designed for Epposi, teams of up to eight participants, were challenged to address real-life case scenarios illustrating the complexity of chronic conditions management from the perspectives of patients, healthcare professionals and providers, payers and carers, encompassing drug therapies and medical technology, legal and ethical issues to try to forge consensus on practical ways to improve chronic care delivery.
In the afternoon, the conference focused on a wide range of other perspectives which all have a significant bearing on health outcomes and which are addressed by the model:
The full research findings will be presented in a white paper to be published in the first quarter of 2012.
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Media contact: Dee O’Sullivan Epposi Communications Mobile: +32 (0)495 893925 E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
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Notes to Editors
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