| Literature DB >> 23663422 |
Olga Golubnitschaja1, Ian D Watson2, Elizabeta Topic2, Sverre Sandberg2, Maurizio Ferrari1,2,3, Vincenzo Costigliola1,4.
Abstract
The authors consider acute problems in the quality and management of medical services challenging health care systems worldwide. This actuality has motivated the representatives of the European Association for Predictive, Preventive and Personalised Medicine and European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine to consider the efforts in promoting an integrative approach based on multidisciplinary expertise to advance health care. The current paper provides a global overview of the problems related to medical services: pandemic scenario in the progression of common chronic diseases, delayed interventional approaches of reactive medicine, poor economy of health care systems, lack of specialised educational programmes, problematic ethical aspects of treatments as well as inadequate communication among professional groups and policymakers. Further, in the form of individual paragraphs, the article presents a consolidated position of the represented European organisations. This position is focused on the patients' needs, expert recommendations for the relevant medical fields and plausible solutions which have a potential to advance health care services if the long-term strategies were to be effectively implemented as proposed here.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23663422 PMCID: PMC3700840 DOI: 10.1186/1878-5085-4-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EPMA J ISSN: 1878-5077 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Current health care approach (A) versus advanced health care approach (B). The advanced health care approach considers a paradigm change from delayed interventional to predictive, preventive and personalised medicine as the robust platform for optimal medical services; figure is taken from [1].
Figure 2Worldwide prognosis of the pandemic increase in the incidence of the T2DM. (*) Estimations as published around the year 2000. (**) Worsening prognosis as published in 2003–2008. Current prognosis is marked in red colour; data taken from [3].
Figure 3R&D expenditure versus new molecular targets as observed in industrial developments in 1997–2007 [20]. NME, new molecule entity.