| Literature DB >> 27478588 |
J Bousquet1, J Farrell2, G Crooks3, P Hellings4, E H Bel5, M Bewick6, N H Chavannes7, J Correia de Sousa8, A A Cruz9, T Haahtela10, G Joos11, N Khaltaev12, J Malva13, A Muraro14, M Nogues15, S Palkonen16, S Pedersen17, C Robalo-Cordeiro18, B Samolinski19, T Strandberg20, A Valiulis21, A Yorgancioglu22, T Zuberbier23, A Bedbrook24, W Aberer25, M Adachi26, A Agusti27, C A Akdis28, M Akdis28, J Ankri29, A Alonso27, I Annesi-Maesano30, I J Ansotegui31, J M Anto32, S Arnavielhe33, H Arshad34, C Bai35, I Baiardini36, C Bachert37, A K Baigenzhin38, C Barbara39, E D Bateman40, B Beghé41, A Ben Kheder42, K S Bennoor43, M Benson44, K C Bergmann23, T Bieber45, C Bindslev-Jensen46, L Bjermer47, H Blain48, F Blasi49, A L Boner50, M Bonini51, S Bonini52, S Bosnic-Anticevitch53, L P Boulet54, R Bourret55, P J Bousquet56, F Braido36, A H Briggs57, C E Brightling58, J Brozek59, R Buhl60, P G Burney61, A Bush62, F Caballero-Fonseca63, D Caimmi64, M A Calderon65, P M Calverley66, P A M Camargos67, G W Canonica36, T Camuzat68, K H Carlsen69, W Carr70, A Carriazo71, T Casale72, A M Cepeda Sarabia73, L Chatzi74, Y Z Chen75, R Chiron64, E Chkhartishvili76, A G Chuchalin77, K F Chung78, G Ciprandi79, I Cirule80, L Cox81, D J Costa82, A Custovic83, R Dahl46, S E Dahlen84, U Darsow85, G De Carlo16, F De Blay86, T Dedeu87, D Deleanu88, E De Manuel Keenoy89, P Demoly90, J A Denburg91, P Devillier92, A Didier93, A T Dinh-Xuan94, R Djukanovic95, D Dokic96, H Douagui97, G Dray98, R Dubakiene99, S R Durham100, M S Dykewicz101, Y El-Gamal102, R Emuzyte103, L M Fabbri104, M Fletcher105, A Fiocchi106, A Fink Wagner107, J Fonseca108, W J Fokkens109, F Forastiere110, P Frith111, M Gaga112, A Gamkrelidze113, J Garces114, J Garcia-Aymerich32, B Gemicioğlu115, J E Gereda116, S González Diaz117, M Gotua118, I Grisle119, L Grouse120, Z Gutter121, M A Guzmán122, L G Heaney123, B Hellquist-Dahl124, D Henderson3, A Hendry125, J Heinrich126, D Heve127, F Horak128, J O' B Hourihane129, P Howarth130, M Humbert131, M E Hyland132, M Illario133, J C Ivancevich134, J R Jardim135, E J Jares136, C Jeandel137, C Jenkins138, S L Johnston139, O Jonquet140, K Julge141, K S Jung142, J Just143, I Kaidashev144, M R Kaitov145, O Kalayci146, A F Kalyoncu147, T Keil148, P K Keith149, L Klimek150, B Koffi N'Goran151, V Kolek152, G H Koppelman153, M L Kowalski154, I Kull155, P Kuna156, V Kvedariene157, B Lambrecht158, S Lau159, D Larenas-Linnemann160, D Laune33, L T T Le161, P Lieberman162, B Lipworth163, J Li164, K Lodrup Carlsen165, R Louis166, W MacNee167, Y Magard168, A Magnan169, B Mahboub170, A Mair171, I Majer172, M J Makela173, P Manning174, S Mara175, G D Marshall176, M R Masjedi177, P Matignon178, M Maurer179, S Mavale-Manuel180, E Melén181, E Melo-Gomes182, E O Meltzer183, A Menzies-Gow184, H Merk185, J P Michel186, N Miculinic187, F Mihaltan188, B Milenkovic189, G M Y Mohammad190, M Molimard191, I Momas192, A Montilla-Santana193, M Morais-Almeida194, M Morgan195, R Mösges196, J Mullol197, S Nafti198, L Namazova-Baranova199, R Naclerio200, A Neou23, H Neffen201, K Nekam202, B Niggemann203, G Ninot204, T D Nyembue205, R E O'Hehir206, K Ohta207, Y Okamoto208, K Okubo209, S Ouedraogo210, P Paggiaro211, I Pali-Schöll212, P Panzner213, N Papadopoulos214, A Papi215, H S Park216, G Passalacqua36, I Pavord217, R Pawankar218, R Pengelly2, O Pfaar219, R Picard220, B Pigearias151, I Pin221, D Plavec222, D Poethig223, W Pohl224, T A Popov225, F Portejoie24, P Potter226, D Postma227, D Price228, K F Rabe229, F Raciborski19, F Radier Pontal230, S Repka-Ramirez231, S Reitamo173, S Rennard232, F Rodenas114, J Roberts233, J Roca234, L Rodriguez Mañas235, C Rolland236, M Roman Rodriguez237, A Romano238, J Rosado-Pinto239, N Rosario240, L Rosenwasser241, M Rottem242, D Ryan243, M Sanchez-Borges244, G K Scadding245, H J Schunemann59, E Serrano246, P Schmid-Grendelmeier247, H Schulz248, A Sheikh249, M Shields250, N Siafakas251, Y Sibille252, T Similowski253, F E R Simons254, J C Sisul255, I Skrindo165, H A Smit256, D Solé257, T Sooronbaev258, O Spranger107, R Stelmach259, P J Sterk260, J Sunyer32, C Thijs261, T To262, A Todo-Bom263, M Triggiani264, R Valenta265, A L Valero266, E Valia114, E Valovirta267, E Van Ganse268, M van Hage269, O Vandenplas270, T Vasankari271, B Vellas272, J Vestbo273, G Vezzani274, P Vichyanond275, G Viegi276, C Vogelmeier277, T Vontetsianos278, M Wagenmann279, B Wallaert280, S Walker281, D Y Wang282, U Wahn203, M Wickman181, D M Williams283, S Williams284, J Wright285, B P Yawn286, P K Yiallouros287, O M Yusuf288, A Zaidi289, H J Zar290, M E Zernotti291, L Zhang292, N Zhong164, M Zidarn293, J Mercier294.
Abstract
Action Plan B3 of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP on AHA) focuses on the integrated care of chronic diseases. Area 5 (Care Pathways) was initiated using chronic respiratory diseases as a model. The chronic respiratory disease action plan includes (1) AIRWAYS integrated care pathways (ICPs), (2) the joint initiative between the Reference site MACVIA-LR (Contre les MAladies Chroniques pour un VIeillissement Actif) and ARIA (Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma), (3) Commitments for Action to the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing and the AIRWAYS ICPs network. It is deployed in collaboration with the World Health Organization Global Alliance against Chronic Respiratory Diseases (GARD). The European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing has proposed a 5-step framework for developing an individual scaling up strategy: (1) what to scale up: (1-a) databases of good practices, (1-b) assessment of viability of the scaling up of good practices, (1-c) classification of good practices for local replication and (2) how to scale up: (2-a) facilitating partnerships for scaling up, (2-b) implementation of key success factors and lessons learnt, including emerging technologies for individualised and predictive medicine. This strategy has already been applied to the chronic respiratory disease action plan of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing.Entities:
Keywords: AIRWAYS ICPs; ARIA; Chronic respiratory diseases; EIP on AHA; European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing; MACVIA; Scaling up
Year: 2016 PMID: 27478588 PMCID: PMC4966705 DOI: 10.1186/s13601-016-0116-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Allergy ISSN: 2045-7022 Impact factor: 5.871
Priority areas and action plans of the EIP on AHA
| Priority areas | Action plans |
|---|---|
| Prevention of diseases and health promotion | |
| A1 | Innovative ways to ensure that patients adhere to their treatment |
| A2 | Innovative solutions for personalised health management, with focus on falls prevention |
| A3 | Action for preventing functional decline and frailty, with a particular focus on malnutrition |
| Care and cure | |
| B3 | Scaling up and replication of successful innovative integrated care models for CD amongst older patients, such as through remote monitoring |
| Active and independent living of older adults | |
| C2 | Improving the uptake of interoperable independent living solutions including guidelines for business models |
| Horizontal topics | |
| D4 | Networking and knowledge sharing on innovation for age-friendly environments |
List of activities implemented by AIRWAYS ICPs
| AIRWAYS ICPs proposal | Implementation | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Proposing a common framework of care pathways for chronic respiratory diseases to facilitate comparability and trans-national initiatives, and plans targeted to all populations according to culture, health systems and income | A repository is under development (PROEIPAHA) and the GARD strategy for adaptation to cultural beliefs and barriers is used [ |
| 2 | Developing a strategy for low and middle-income settings | AIRWAYS ICPs uses existing WHO programmes such as the WHO GARD, WHO PEN, the essential list of drugs [ |
| 3 | Aiding risk stratification in chronic disease patients with a common strategy | A common risk stratification strategy for all chronic diseases is available [ |
| 4 | Defining important questions on chronic respiratory diseases in the elderly | Questions on asthma-COPD and rhinitis have been examined using a Delphi process (in preparation) |
| 5 | Developing integrated care pathways for chronic respiratory diseases and their comorbidities, with a specific focus on the elderly | Developing ICPs for chronic respiratory diseases and their comorbidities, with a specific focus on the elderly [ |
| 6 | Tackling chronic diseases across the life cycle | Chronic respiratory diseases occur along the life cycle and they should be prevented, diagnosed and managed early to promote AHA [ |
| 7 | Interacting with frailty in chronic respiratory disease (EIP on AHA Action Plan A3) and defining active and healthy ageing | Frailty is associated with chronic diseases and chronic respiratory disease. It is important to consider frailty in the management of chronic respiratory disease and to use an operational definition of AHA [ |
| 8 | Implementing emerging technologies for individualised and predictive medicine in accordance with guidelines proposed by the European Commission (https://www.casym.eu) | MASK (MACVIA–ARIA Sentinel NetworK) uses emerging technologies to develop a management strategy of rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity. It is available in 15 European countries [ |
| 9 | Having a significant impact on the health of citizens in the short term (reduction of morbidity, improvement of education in children and of work in adults), the long-term (AHA), and in the development of health promotion | Asthma and COPD national plans are cost-efficient. Some have been scaled up successfully [ |
| 10 | Educational activities | Educational activities are part of any scaling up strategy |
| 11 | Stratification of health systems in Europe and beyond (EIP on AHA Action Plan A3, AA4-B3) | DG Connect has initiated this project (Wouter, submitted) |
The 5-step framework of EIP on AHA scaling up strategy
| Step | Scaling up strategy | Individual scaling up strategy |
|---|---|---|
|
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| 1 | Database of good practices | |
| 2 | Assessment of viability of the scaling up of good practices | |
| 3 | Classification of good practices for local replication | |
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| ||
| 4 | Facilitating partnerships for scaling up | |
| 5 | Implementation | Planning and initiating the service |
| Setting up a system for change | ||
| Organisational process and design choices | ||
| Training and skills for the work force | ||
| Appropriate resourcing for equipment | ||
| Integration of clinical record systems | ||
| Creating capacity | ||
| Monitoring, evaluation and dissemination | ||
Good practices of the EIP on AHA Commitments for Action on chronic respiratory diseases
| Activity | Expertise | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| MACVIA-LR (Languedoc Roussillon) | AIRWAYS ICPs | See Table | Founder of AIRWAYS ICPs |
| Finland | Finnish asthma, COPD and allergy plans | [ | Finnish plans for asthma [ |
| Norway | Deployment of the Finnish allergy plan to Norwegian regions | [ | Deployment of the Finnish allergy plan to all the regions of Norway. This expertise can be used to deploy national plans to regions |
| Poland | Senioral policy of Poland following the EIP on AHA recommendations including the 2011 EU Council recommendations | [ | The Commitment for Action of Poland was the initiator of the EU Council policy on chronic respiratory disease in children [ |
| Portugal | National coordination and national plan for all chronic respiratory diseases | [ | The national coordination is led by the Directorate General of Health and includes all stakeholders required for a national plan which is deployed in the regions. The plan follows the Portuguese National Programme for Respiratory Diseases (PNDR) |
| Turkey | National coordination and | [ | The first national coordination of GARD including the Ministry of Health, WHO national office and major societies. Extremely successful programme with all public and private stakeholders of a country. Excellent example for scale up strategy |
An example of scaling up strategy: ARIA (Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma) [21, 26]
| Allergic rhinitis is one of the most prevalent diseases in the world (25 % of the European Union population). Although symptoms of rhinitis appear to be trivial, the disease affects social activities as well as school and work performance [ |
| ARIA, a guideline for allergic rhinitis and its multimorbidity with asthma, is the first multimorbidity guideline in chronic diseases. It was developed in the early 2000s in collaboration with the World Health Organization using the recommended methodology for guidelines (Shekelle) [ |
| It has been revised using the GRADE methodology (2010) [ |
| It is the most widely used guideline for rhinitis, and for rhinitis and asthma multimorbidity globally [ |
| The ARIA classification of allergic rhinitis severity has been used for the development of Health Technology Assessment guidelines, in particular in the US [ |
| ARIA recommendations have been adopted by government guidelines (Brazil, Portugal, Singapore) |
| ARIA is implemented in 64 countries and the pocket guide of the guideline has been translated into 52 languages |
| MASK-rhinitis (MACVIA–ARIA Sentinel NetworK for allergic rhinitis) is a care pathway centred around the use of Information and Communications Technology (ICT) tools and a clinical decision support system (CDSS) based on ARIA [ |
| Over 600 scientific papers have used ARIA for the classification of allergic rhinitis in clinical practice, clinical trials, as well as epidemiologic (from pre-school children to the elderly [ |
Classification of good practices for replication: the example of the Finnish Asthma Plan [40]
| Items | Example of the Finnish Asthma Plan | |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledge—gaps | Between knowledge and practice (research, specific) | The plan has been [ |
| Existence of tested solutions (good examples, specific) | It has shown cost-effective reduction of hospitalisations, deaths and disability | |
| Large variations between countries (good examples, general) | The Finnish Asthma Plan has been deployed successfully to over 25 countries globally including developing countries. The same effectiveness has been demonstrated [ | |
| Reaction time | Calendar (time needed for implementation | The Finnish Asthma Plan was a 10-year plan. Most indicators were found to change significantly after 24–36 months, but the effectiveness improved over the 10-year programme. In Brazil, an impact at population morbidity indicators was found after 24 months |
| Effects/visibility (time needed to assess impact) | ||
| Stewardship | Administrative and political capacity. Leadership, inside the health sector and in other sectors (Health in All Policies) | Many plans are national plans supported by the Ministry of Health or the department of health of the region (e.g. Minas Gerais, Brazil). All stakeholders including health (specialists, GPs, nurses, pharmacists, other health care professionals) and social carers as well as patients are involved in the plan. A specific action is devoted to education, coaching and training |
| Political agenda | Electoral programme | |
| Social concerns | A specific attention has been put on social concerns and a promotion in the country at all levels (citizens and patients, health and social carers, politicians) has been continuously monitored | |
| Crisis | ||
| International institutions recommendations/conditions | The Finnish Asthma Plan and its follow up (the Finnish Allergy Programme) [ | |
| Costs and affordability | It is important to consider the cost of the programme for selecting priority areas for investment. Certain decisions could need relevant investments (e.g. equipment, personnel, etc.) while others involve low direct economic cost (e.g. anti-tobacco strategies and legislation). The costs of a programme have to be considered in the context of the economic situation of the country (GDP/inhabitant; expansion/recession/stagnation; private and public debt; etc.) | The Finnish Asthma Plan is comprehensive and includes treatments, preventive measures (e.g. tobacco smoking), action plans, education at all levels. It was found to be cost-effective. This has been demonstrated in Finland, but also in other countries such as Brazil [ |
| Acceptability | The support or the opposition that a certain policy is going to attract | The Plan was extremely well accepted in all countries where it was promoted [ |
| Monitoring capability | The availability of the necessary information to monitor the starting point, the processes and the outcomes | Baseline information on the burden of asthma is available even though in most developing countries there is no information [ |
| It highlights also the importance of transparency | National (or regional) statistics are transparent | |
| Contextual factors | Demographics | The Finnish Asthma Plan was a national plan covering the entire country. Some plans are regional plans (Bahia or Minais Gerais) |
| Social and economic conditions | The Finnish Asthma Plan targeted the entire country. The Minais Gerais plan targets children in deprived areas (“favelas”) who are at high risk of severe exacerbations and death [ | |
| Cultural factors | In Finland, barriers are not very important. However, in many developing countries, cultural barriers have been carefully considered according to a WHO report [ | |
| Other non-health care determinants of health that impact on population health and wellbeing |
AIRWAYS ICPs 2014 events
| Date | Location | Event and goals |
|---|---|---|
| 27-02 | Newcastle (UK) | Launch of AIRWAYS ICPs by Dr. M Bewick, Deputy National Medical Director of NHS England, [ |
| 12-05 | Athens (Greece) | AIRWAYS ICPs was presented to the EIP on AHA |
| 09-06 | Copenhagen (Denmark) | European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI). A symposium was organized (1000 participants) and a working meeting held immediately after: AIRWAYS ICPs and MACVIA–ARIA [ |
| 17-08 | Bahia (Brazil) | WHO GARD annual meeting. Presentation of AIRWAYS ICPs and MACVIA–ARIA to the GARD members and WHO. Acceptance of AIRWAYS ICPs to strengthen the 2013–2020 Noncommunicable Diseases WHO Action Plan [ |
| 16-09 | Rotterdam (NL) | Annual meeting of the European Union Geriatric Medicine Society (EUGMS): Presidential lecture on AIRWAYS (T Strandberg, President of the Society) |
| 09-10 | Dubrovnik (Croatia) | Annual meeting of the Croatian Respiratory Society. AIRWAYS ICPs and MACVIA–ARIA were presented (M Niculinic, President of the Society) |
| 16-10 | Rome (Italy) | The Italian Presidency of the European Union Council has made chronic respiratory diseases one of the priorities. A GARD Italy meeting was held at the Ministry of Health. AIRWAYS ICPs was presented among other projects to be included in the Priority |
| 20-10 | Montpellier (France) | The Region Languedoc Roussillon (in collaboration with the region North England and the EIP on AHA Reference Site Collaborative Network) invited one member from each Reference Site to scale up AIRWAYS ICPs. The Collaborative Network decided to include AIRWAYS ICPs in its priorities for scaling up and implementation (M Bewick, R Pengelly, Secretary of State of Northern Ireland) [ |
| 05-11 | Salzburg (Austria) | Annual meeting of the Austrian Allergy Society |
| 07-11 | Guangzhou (China) | Annual meeting: Discussion for the deployment of AIRWAYS ICPs and MACVIA–ARIA in China (NS Zhong, former President of the Chinese Medical Association) [ |
| 20-11 | Oslo (Norway) | Commitments for Action Oslo, Helsinki and Montpellier (K Lodrup Carlsen, T Haahtela, JB). The agreement for the deployment of the Finnish Allergy Programme in Norway was discussed at the Ministry of Health [ |