| Literature DB >> 29868588 |
João O Malva1,2, Alda Amado1,3, Alexandra Rodrigues1,4, Anabela Mota-Pinto1,5,6, Ana F Cardoso1,7, Ana M Teixeira1,8, Ana Todo-Bom1,6,9, António Devesa1,10, António F Ambrósio1,2, António L Cunha1,11, Bárbara Gomes1,2,12, Carina Dantas1,13, Cidalina Abreu1,7, Isabel Santana1,9,14, Jean Bousquet15, João Apóstolo1,7, Lúcia Santos1,16, Lúcio Meneses de Almeida1,17, Maddalena Illario18, Rafaela Veríssimo19, Vitor Rodrigues1,5, Manuel T Veríssimo1,2,9.
Abstract
Challenges posed by demographic changes and population aging are key priorities for the Horizon 2020 Program of the European Commission. Aligned with the vision of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP on AHA), the development, exchange, and large-scale adoption of innovative good practices is a key element of the responses required to ensure all European citizens remain as active and healthy as possible as they age. Urged by the need of developing scalable disruptive innovation across Europe, the European Commission and the EIP on AHA created the Reference Sites; local coalition of partners that develop good practices to support AHA. Ageing@Coimbra is an example of how this can be achieved at a regional level. The consortium comprises over 70 institutions that develop innovative practices to support AHA in Portugal. Ageing@Coimbra partners support a regional network of stakeholders that build a holistic ecosystem in health and social care, taking into consideration the specificities of the territories, living environments and cultural resources (2,243,934 inhabitants, 530,423 aged 65 or plus live in the Centre Region of Portugal). Good practices in reducing the burden of brain diseases that affect cognition and memory impairment in older people and tackling social isolation in urban and rural areas are among the top priorities of Ageing@Coimbra. Profiting from the collaborative work of academia, business companies, civil society, and authorities, the quadruple helix of Ageing@Coimbra supports: early diagnosis of frailty and disease; care and cure; and active, assisted, and independent living. This paper describes, as a Community Case Study, the creation of a Reference Site of the EIP on AHA, Ageing@Coimbra, and its impact in Portugal. This Reference Site can motivate other regions to develop innovative formulas to federate stakeholders and networks, building consortia at regional level. This growing movement, across Europe, is inspired by the quadruple helix concept and by the replication of innovative good practices; creating new Reference Sites for the benefit of Citizens.Entities:
Keywords: European commission; active and healthy aging; ageing (aging); innovation; reference sites
Year: 2018 PMID: 29868588 PMCID: PMC5952223 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Flyer of SIMPATHY case study in Portugal. SIMPATHY in Portugal recognized the lack of policy guidelines for polypharmacy management across the country.
Figure 2MACVIA/ARIA allergy diary Smartphone Application (App) developed by the MACVIA-Fr Reference Site, adopted and replicated across EU and non-EU countries; 15931 users—AT 655; AU 196; BE 164; BR 2039; CA 34; CH 905; CZ 5; DE 814; DK 151; ES 736; FI 456; FR 1029; GB 962; GR 240; IT 1970; LT 394; MX 905; NL 603; PL 968; PT 2264; SE 174; TR 260 (November 22, 2017).
Figure 3Older citizens (identified through Third Age Universities and Social Care Providers) experience and evaluate technologies at the AAL Forum 2017 (Coimbra, October 2–4, 2017). Over 120 old citizens tested, evaluated, and provided recommendations for technology developers. The identified participants and the AAL Forum organization expressed written agreement for the inclusion of these photos in the present publication.
Figure 4Innovation cluster of Ageing@Coimbra on (A) “Social isolation: Low-density territories and urban areas,” (B) “Promoting Healthy Brain: Brain aging, dementia, and vision impairment.” The innovation pipeline represents the integration of stakeholder’s activities from fundamental research into clinical or end-user applications.
Figure 5Number of applications for the award of good practices on AHA (“Boas Práticas de Envelhecimento Ativo e Saudável da Região Centro”). The contest involved stakeholders from 49 of the 100 municipalities of Centro Region, that submitted 1 or more application, per municipality, of the total of 128 good practices (blue color scale for number of application per municipality).