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Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people

Thomas A. F. Wylie, Anna Morris, Elizabeth Robertson, Ann Middleton, Carolyn Newbert, Birthe Andersen, Giuseppe Maltese Orcid Logo, Rachel Stocker Orcid Logo, Andrew Weightman, Alan Sinclair, Steve Bain Orcid Logo

Diabetic Medicine, Volume: 39, Issue: 7

Swansea University Author: Steve Bain Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/dme.14795

Abstract

Aims:To identify key research questions where answers could improve care for older people living with diabetes (PLWD), and provide detailed recommendations for researchers and research funders on how best to address them.Methods:A series of online research workshops were conducted, bringing together...

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Published in: Diabetic Medicine
ISSN: 0742-3071 1464-5491
Published: Wiley 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa59310
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Throughout the pre-workshop phase, during each workshop, and in manuscript preparation and editing, PLWD played an active and dynamic role in discussions as part of both an iterative and narrative process.Results:The following key questions in this field were identified, and research recommendations for each were developed:How can we improve our understanding of the characteristics of older people living with diabetes (PLWD) and their outcomes, and can this deliver better person-centred care?How are services to care for older PLWD currently delivered, both for their diabetes and other conditions? 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spelling 2022-07-25T17:27:32.7948974 v2 59310 2022-02-07 Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people 5399f4c6e6a70f3608a084ddb938511a 0000-0001-8519-4964 Steve Bain Steve Bain true false 2022-02-07 BMS Aims:To identify key research questions where answers could improve care for older people living with diabetes (PLWD), and provide detailed recommendations for researchers and research funders on how best to address them.Methods:A series of online research workshops were conducted, bringing together a range of PLWD and an acknowledged group of academic and clinical experts in their diabetes care to identify areas for future research. Throughout the pre-workshop phase, during each workshop, and in manuscript preparation and editing, PLWD played an active and dynamic role in discussions as part of both an iterative and narrative process.Results:The following key questions in this field were identified, and research recommendations for each were developed:How can we improve our understanding of the characteristics of older people living with diabetes (PLWD) and their outcomes, and can this deliver better person-centred care?How are services to care for older PLWD currently delivered, both for their diabetes and other conditions? How can we optimise and streamline the process and ensure everyone gets the best care, tailored to their individual needs?What tools might be used to evaluate the level of understanding of diabetes in the older population amongst non-specialist Healthcare Professionals (HCPs)?How can virtual experts or centres most effectively provide access to specialist multi-disciplinary team (MDT) expertise for older PLWD and the HCPs caring for them?Is a combination of exercise and a nutrition-dense, high protein diet effective in the prevention of the adverse effects of type 2 diabetes and deterioration in frailty, and how might this be delivered in a way which is acceptable to people with type 2 diabetes?How might we best use continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in older people and, for those who require support, how should the data be shared?How can older PLWD be better empowered to manage their diabetes in their own home, particularly when living with additional long-term conditions?What are the benefits of models of peer support for older PLWD, both when living independently and when in care?Conclusions:This paper outlines recommendations supported by PLWD through which new research could improve their diabetes care and calls on the research community and funders to address them in future research programmes and strategies. Journal Article Diabetic Medicine 39 7 Wiley 0742-3071 1464-5491 diabetes; ageing, PLWD, research 1 7 2022 2022-07-01 10.1111/dme.14795 COLLEGE NANME Biomedical Sciences COLLEGE CODE BMS Swansea University Diabetes UK 2022-07-25T17:27:32.7948974 2022-02-07T10:24:46.7421936 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Swansea University Medical School - Medicine Thomas A. F. Wylie 1 Anna Morris 2 Elizabeth Robertson 3 Ann Middleton 4 Carolyn Newbert 5 Birthe Andersen 6 Giuseppe Maltese 0000-0001-6770-3569 7 Rachel Stocker 0000-0002-8189-2746 8 Andrew Weightman 9 Alan Sinclair 10 Steve Bain 0000-0001-8519-4964 11 59310__22394__e1db218b35014d8e9e863e5a7b01f919.pdf 59310.pdf 2022-02-17T11:52:28.9721624 Output 817959 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2022 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
title Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
spellingShingle Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
Steve Bain
title_short Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
title_full Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
title_fullStr Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
title_full_unstemmed Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
title_sort Ageing well with diabetes: A workshop to co‐design research recommendations for improving the diabetes care of older people
author_id_str_mv 5399f4c6e6a70f3608a084ddb938511a
author_id_fullname_str_mv 5399f4c6e6a70f3608a084ddb938511a_***_Steve Bain
author Steve Bain
author2 Thomas A. F. Wylie
Anna Morris
Elizabeth Robertson
Ann Middleton
Carolyn Newbert
Birthe Andersen
Giuseppe Maltese
Rachel Stocker
Andrew Weightman
Alan Sinclair
Steve Bain
format Journal article
container_title Diabetic Medicine
container_volume 39
container_issue 7
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 0742-3071
1464-5491
doi_str_mv 10.1111/dme.14795
publisher Wiley
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str Swansea University Medical School - Medicine{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Swansea University Medical School - Medicine
document_store_str 1
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description Aims:To identify key research questions where answers could improve care for older people living with diabetes (PLWD), and provide detailed recommendations for researchers and research funders on how best to address them.Methods:A series of online research workshops were conducted, bringing together a range of PLWD and an acknowledged group of academic and clinical experts in their diabetes care to identify areas for future research. Throughout the pre-workshop phase, during each workshop, and in manuscript preparation and editing, PLWD played an active and dynamic role in discussions as part of both an iterative and narrative process.Results:The following key questions in this field were identified, and research recommendations for each were developed:How can we improve our understanding of the characteristics of older people living with diabetes (PLWD) and their outcomes, and can this deliver better person-centred care?How are services to care for older PLWD currently delivered, both for their diabetes and other conditions? How can we optimise and streamline the process and ensure everyone gets the best care, tailored to their individual needs?What tools might be used to evaluate the level of understanding of diabetes in the older population amongst non-specialist Healthcare Professionals (HCPs)?How can virtual experts or centres most effectively provide access to specialist multi-disciplinary team (MDT) expertise for older PLWD and the HCPs caring for them?Is a combination of exercise and a nutrition-dense, high protein diet effective in the prevention of the adverse effects of type 2 diabetes and deterioration in frailty, and how might this be delivered in a way which is acceptable to people with type 2 diabetes?How might we best use continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in older people and, for those who require support, how should the data be shared?How can older PLWD be better empowered to manage their diabetes in their own home, particularly when living with additional long-term conditions?What are the benefits of models of peer support for older PLWD, both when living independently and when in care?Conclusions:This paper outlines recommendations supported by PLWD through which new research could improve their diabetes care and calls on the research community and funders to address them in future research programmes and strategies.
published_date 2022-07-01T04:16:31Z
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