Mohan Viswanathan, Prathiba Vijayaraghavan, Pradeepa Rajendra
Madras Diabetes Research Foundation and Dr Mohan's Diabetes Specialties Centre, WHO Collaborating Centre for Non-communicable Diseases Prevention & Control, IDF Centre for Education, Gopalapuram, Chennai, India
Madras Diabetes Research Foundation and Dr Mohan's Diabetes Specialties Centre, WHO Collaborating Centre for Non-communicable Diseases Prevention & Control, IDF Centre for Education, Gopalapuram, Chennai, India.
J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2014 Mar;8(2):256-261. doi: 10.1177/1932296814525029. Epub 2014 Feb 27.
Diabetes, with its acute and long-term complications, has become a major health hazard in developing countries. An estimated 62.4 million people in India have diabetes. With increasing urbanization and industrialization, we can expect huge numbers of people with diabetes in India in the future. Moreover, all diabetes efforts in India are currently focused in urban areas while 70% of India's population actually lives in rural areas. The current statistics demonstrates that urgent interventions are mandatory to curb the epidemic of diabetes and its complications at the grassroots level. This gap in providing diabetes care can be nullified by the use of tele-diabetology. This holds great potential to overcome barriers and improve quality and access to diabetes care to remote, underserved areas of developing counties. The Chunampet Rural Diabetes Prevention Project (CRDPP) has been developed and tested as a successful model for screening and delivering diabetes care to rural areas in developing countries. Using a tele-diabetology mobile van loaded with appropriate equipment, trained technicians, and satellite technology helped us to screen for diabetes and its complications and deliver diabetes care to remote villages in southern India. The Chunampet model can be applied in reaching out to remote areas where specialized diabetes care facilities may not be available.
糖尿病及其急性和长期并发症已成为发展中国家的主要健康威胁。据估计,印度有6240万人患有糖尿病。随着城市化和工业化的不断发展,我们预计未来印度会有大量糖尿病患者。此外,印度目前所有的糖尿病防治工作都集中在城市地区,而印度70%的人口实际上生活在农村地区。当前的统计数据表明,必须采取紧急干预措施,在基层遏制糖尿病及其并发症的流行。通过远程糖尿病学可以消除在提供糖尿病护理方面的这一差距。这在克服障碍以及改善发展中国家偏远、服务不足地区的糖尿病护理质量和可及性方面具有巨大潜力。Chunampet农村糖尿病预防项目(CRDPP)已被开发并作为一个成功模式进行测试,用于为发展中国家农村地区筛查和提供糖尿病护理。使用一辆配备适当设备、训练有素的技术人员和卫星技术的远程糖尿病学移动诊疗车,帮助我们在印度南部的偏远村庄筛查糖尿病及其并发症,并提供糖尿病护理。Chunampet模式可用于覆盖那些可能没有专门糖尿病护理设施的偏远地区。