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Type 2 Diabetes - Transforming the Diagnosis Conversation

Project impact

Early Self-Management: Redesigned diagnosis conversations for Type 2 diabetes aim to engage patients early, reducing complications and secondary care referrals

Better Communication: The project emphasises improved communication between primary and secondary care to enhance patient experiences and reduce unnecessary referrals

Key Outputs: Developed a market review, support recommendations, and a prototype tool to improve Type 2 diabetes diagnosis conversations

Exploring person-centred approaches to diabetes care in partnership with NHS Lanarkshire to create a roadmap for future care.

Diabetes project hub

DHI uniquely drives Diabetes Innovation in Scotland by collaborating with NHS, industry, academia, and individuals with lived experiences to advance innovation and funding opportunities.

DHI uniquely drives Diabetes Innovation in Scotland by collaborating with NHS, industry, academia, and individuals with lived experiences to advance innovation and funding opportunities.

By focusing on one key moment in the care journey - the conversation between the primary care health professional and the newly diagnosed type 2 patient - the DHI in partnership with NHS Lanarkshire aimed to understand how secondary care and primary care staff could work more collaboratively to improve self-management in the community and a more consistent approach.

Through exploring and mapping current care experiences and identifying aspirations for future care, using co-design methodology, we identified opportunities to redesign the type 2 diabetes diagnosis conversation to support early engagement.

Summary

Exploring person-centred approaches to diabetes care in partnership with NHS Lanarkshire to create a roadmap for future care.

Partners

NHS Lanarkshire

Emerging insights have revealed several opportunities for improvement:

• Engaging people in self-management at diagnosis to reduce later complications and referrals to secondary care

• Improving communication between primary and secondary care to reduce unnecessary referrals and improve the person’s experience

• Using technology to support citizen education and confidence to self-manage

Impact & value

Image by Jacob Padilla

A market research report was concluded to outline the current state of diabetes care and policy in Scotland and current emerging digital technologies to support diabetes care. The project also employed a participatory process including pop-up engagements in the community, interviews with people living with type 2 diabetes and primary and secondary care health professionals, a codesign workshop with health professionals and further engagements with people living with Type 2 diabetes to refine the concepts.

Rich insights were generated on how people would like to be supported at the diagnosis stage, and how primary care staff can be supported by specialist staff to create more consistent person-centred diagnosis conversations.

There were several key outputs from the project: the market review; recommendations around support for practice nurses; recommendations around diagnosis specialist group appointments, and the development of a prototype of the paper diagnosis conversation tool to support the discussion between patient and healthcare professional at the point of diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes.

Progress to date

Image by Jacob Padilla

Staff related to the project

Further engagement and scoping activity has taken place over the last 12 months, through DHI Simulation activity, to consider the potential digitisation of the tool prototyped in the DHI DSE. This work will be progressed through consultation with the National Diabetes Group.

The insights gained through this project, and the DHI's other work in diabetes will inform future projects in this critical domain.

Next steps

Image by Jacob Padilla
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