E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: lessons from Denmark in a time of need

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

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E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease : lessons from Denmark in a time of need. / Ankersen, Dorit V.; Noack, Savannah; Munkholm, Pia; Sparrow, Miles P.

In: Internal Medicine Journal (Online), Vol. 51, No. 8, 01.08.2021, p. 1207-1211.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ankersen, DV, Noack, S, Munkholm, P & Sparrow, MP 2021, 'E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: lessons from Denmark in a time of need', Internal Medicine Journal (Online), vol. 51, no. 8, pp. 1207-1211. https://doi.org/10.1111/imj.15132

APA

Ankersen, D. V., Noack, S., Munkholm, P., & Sparrow, M. P. (2021). E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: lessons from Denmark in a time of need. Internal Medicine Journal (Online), 51(8), 1207-1211. https://doi.org/10.1111/imj.15132

Vancouver

Ankersen DV, Noack S, Munkholm P, Sparrow MP. E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: lessons from Denmark in a time of need. Internal Medicine Journal (Online). 2021 Aug 1;51(8):1207-1211. https://doi.org/10.1111/imj.15132

Author

Ankersen, Dorit V. ; Noack, Savannah ; Munkholm, Pia ; Sparrow, Miles P. / E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease : lessons from Denmark in a time of need. In: Internal Medicine Journal (Online). 2021 ; Vol. 51, No. 8. pp. 1207-1211.

Bibtex

@article{cb3f97f4ba524a5184f2361a73d94ba2,
title = "E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease: lessons from Denmark in a time of need",
abstract = "In Denmark, remote monitoring and management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) started two decades ago with the web application Constant Care. The disease monitoring in Constant Care consists of simple disease activity questionnaires and home measurement of faecal calprotectin, a stool biomarker for inflammation. It has now been implemented in clinical practice at North Zealand University Hospital in Denmark. Digital health care solutions facilitate remote contact between patients and healthcare providers and have been shown to reduce time to remission, outpatient visits and hospital admissions, and increase adherence to medical therapy, quality of life and disease and treatment knowledge. In Australia, E-Health is an area of increasing interest, particularly given the significant distances travelled by rural patients to access specialist care. There are several foreseeable benefits to incorporating E-Health/remote monitoring into Australian IBD management, including reduced burdens of time and cost on rural patients, and more efficient management of well outpatients, thereby increasing clinic availability for acutely unwell patients. The significant portion of IBD patients managed in private practice in Australia, and the infrastructure within private practice that is well suited to implementation of E-Health makes Australia a viable setting for an E-Health IBD management model like Denmark's Constant Care model. One pilot study is currently underway investigating the feasibility of rapid and remote IBD monitoring and E-Health in an Australian IBD population. The current COVID-19 pandemic has further illustrated the importance of telehealth as a means of maintaining health services to patients in geographic, or social, isolation.",
author = "Ankersen, {Dorit V.} and Savannah Noack and Pia Munkholm and Sparrow, {Miles P.}",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/imj.15132",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "1207--1211",
journal = "Internal Medicine Journal",
issn = "1444-0903",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - E-Health and remote management of patients with inflammatory bowel disease

T2 - lessons from Denmark in a time of need

AU - Ankersen, Dorit V.

AU - Noack, Savannah

AU - Munkholm, Pia

AU - Sparrow, Miles P.

PY - 2021/8/1

Y1 - 2021/8/1

N2 - In Denmark, remote monitoring and management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) started two decades ago with the web application Constant Care. The disease monitoring in Constant Care consists of simple disease activity questionnaires and home measurement of faecal calprotectin, a stool biomarker for inflammation. It has now been implemented in clinical practice at North Zealand University Hospital in Denmark. Digital health care solutions facilitate remote contact between patients and healthcare providers and have been shown to reduce time to remission, outpatient visits and hospital admissions, and increase adherence to medical therapy, quality of life and disease and treatment knowledge. In Australia, E-Health is an area of increasing interest, particularly given the significant distances travelled by rural patients to access specialist care. There are several foreseeable benefits to incorporating E-Health/remote monitoring into Australian IBD management, including reduced burdens of time and cost on rural patients, and more efficient management of well outpatients, thereby increasing clinic availability for acutely unwell patients. The significant portion of IBD patients managed in private practice in Australia, and the infrastructure within private practice that is well suited to implementation of E-Health makes Australia a viable setting for an E-Health IBD management model like Denmark's Constant Care model. One pilot study is currently underway investigating the feasibility of rapid and remote IBD monitoring and E-Health in an Australian IBD population. The current COVID-19 pandemic has further illustrated the importance of telehealth as a means of maintaining health services to patients in geographic, or social, isolation.

AB - In Denmark, remote monitoring and management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) started two decades ago with the web application Constant Care. The disease monitoring in Constant Care consists of simple disease activity questionnaires and home measurement of faecal calprotectin, a stool biomarker for inflammation. It has now been implemented in clinical practice at North Zealand University Hospital in Denmark. Digital health care solutions facilitate remote contact between patients and healthcare providers and have been shown to reduce time to remission, outpatient visits and hospital admissions, and increase adherence to medical therapy, quality of life and disease and treatment knowledge. In Australia, E-Health is an area of increasing interest, particularly given the significant distances travelled by rural patients to access specialist care. There are several foreseeable benefits to incorporating E-Health/remote monitoring into Australian IBD management, including reduced burdens of time and cost on rural patients, and more efficient management of well outpatients, thereby increasing clinic availability for acutely unwell patients. The significant portion of IBD patients managed in private practice in Australia, and the infrastructure within private practice that is well suited to implementation of E-Health makes Australia a viable setting for an E-Health IBD management model like Denmark's Constant Care model. One pilot study is currently underway investigating the feasibility of rapid and remote IBD monitoring and E-Health in an Australian IBD population. The current COVID-19 pandemic has further illustrated the importance of telehealth as a means of maintaining health services to patients in geographic, or social, isolation.

U2 - 10.1111/imj.15132

DO - 10.1111/imj.15132

M3 - Review

C2 - 34346152

VL - 51

SP - 1207

EP - 1211

JO - Internal Medicine Journal

JF - Internal Medicine Journal

SN - 1444-0903

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 280613208