Josefien Van Olmen1, Ku Grace Marie2, Darras Christian3, Kalobu Jean Clovis4, Bewa Emery4, Van Pelt Maurits5, Hen Heang5, Van Acker Kristien6, Eggermont Natalie7, Schellevis François8, Kegels Guy2. 1. Institute of Tropical Medicine, Department of Public Health Antwerp, Belgium; Department of General Practice & Elderly Medicine, EMGO, Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Electronic address: jvanolmen@itg.be. 2. Institute of Tropical Medicine, Department of Public Health Antwerp, Belgium. 3. Memisa, Brussel, Belgium. 4. Memisa, Kinshasa, People's Republic of Congo. 5. MoPoTsyo, Phnom Penh, Cambodia. 6. Algemeen Ziekenhuis Heilige Familie, Reet & Centre de Santé des Fagnes, Chimay, Belgium. 7. Universitair Ziekenhuis, Vrije Universiteit Brussels. Belgium. 8. Department of General Practice & Elderly Medicine, EMGO, Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; NIVEL (Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research), The Netherlands.
Abstract
AIMS: To improve access and quality of diabetes care for people in low-income countries, it is important to understand which elements of diabetes care are effective. This paper analyses three diabetes care programmes in the DR Congo, Cambodia and the Philippines. METHODS: Three programmes offering diabetes care and self-management were selected. Programme information was collected through document review and interviews. Data about participants' characteristics, health outcomes, care utilisation, expenditures, care perception and self-management were extracted from a study database. Comparative univariate analyses were performed. RESULTS: Kin-réseau (DR Congo) is an urban primary care network with 8000 patients. MoPoTsyo (Cambodia) is a community-based peer educator network, covering 7000 patients. FiLDCare (Philippines) is a programme in which 1000 patients receive care in a health facility and self-management support from a community health worker. Content of care of the programmes is comparable, the focus on self-management largest in MoPoTsyo. On average, Kin-réseau patients have a higher age, longer diabetes history and more overweight. MoPoTsyo includes most female, most illiterate and most lean patients. Health outcomes (HbA1C level, systolic blood pressure, diabetes foot lesions) were most favourable for MoPoTsyo patients. Diabetes-related health care expenditure was highest for FiLDCare patients. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows it possible to maintain a diabetes programme with minimal external resources, offering care and self-management support. It also illustrates that health outcomes of persons with diabetes are determined by their bio-psycho-social characteristics and behaviour, which are each subject to the content of care and the approach to chronic illness and self-management of the programme, in turn influenced by the larger context.
AIMS: To improve access and quality of diabetes care for people in low-income countries, it is important to understand which elements of diabetes care are effective. This paper analyses three diabetes care programmes in the DR Congo, Cambodia and the Philippines. METHODS: Three programmes offering diabetes care and self-management were selected. Programme information was collected through document review and interviews. Data about participants' characteristics, health outcomes, care utilisation, expenditures, care perception and self-management were extracted from a study database. Comparative univariate analyses were performed. RESULTS:Kin-réseau (DR Congo) is an urban primary care network with 8000 patients. MoPoTsyo (Cambodia) is a community-based peer educator network, covering 7000 patients. FiLDCare (Philippines) is a programme in which 1000 patients receive care in a health facility and self-management support from a community health worker. Content of care of the programmes is comparable, the focus on self-management largest in MoPoTsyo. On average, Kin-réseau patients have a higher age, longer diabetes history and more overweight. MoPoTsyo includes most female, most illiterate and most lean patients. Health outcomes (HbA1C level, systolic blood pressure, diabetes foot lesions) were most favourable for MoPoTsyo patients. Diabetes-related health care expenditure was highest for FiLDCare patients. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows it possible to maintain a diabetes programme with minimal external resources, offering care and self-management support. It also illustrates that health outcomes of persons with diabetes are determined by their bio-psycho-social characteristics and behaviour, which are each subject to the content of care and the approach to chronic illness and self-management of the programme, in turn influenced by the larger context.
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