Designing a Proactive, Person-Centre, Digital Integrated Care System

Authors: Jule Doyle, Evert-Jan Hoogerwerf, Janneke Kuiper, Emma Murphy, Caoimhe Hannigan, John Dinsmore, Thomas van der Auwermeulen, Albert Jonas, An Jacobs, Lorenza Malucelli, Lorenzo Desideri, Valentina Fiordelmondo
Publication type: Journal Paper
Publication year: 2017

ProACT, a Horizon 2020 project, aims to develop a technology ecosystem to support
integrated care for older persons with multimorbidity (PwMs). The ecosystem will connect
four key models of care and support – 1) homecare (including informal care), 2) hospital care,
3) community and social care 4) social support networks – and will be centred on the person at
home self-managing their conditions with support from their care network. The development
of a digital platform for integrated care has the potential to support existing practice, and
to improve the management of a complex and integrated care plan, introducing new ways of
collaboration between key actors.
To understand care pathways for PwMs, we mapped the existing pathways across three EU
countries – Ireland and Belgium, where ProACT will be trialled with 60 older adult participants
and their care networks at each site, and Italy where a transferability study will take place.
We also identified key stakeholders in the care ecosystems and conducted interviews and
focus groups with 166 participants (including PwMs and support actors - informal and formal
carers, pharmacists and a range of healthcare professionals) across the three countries, in
order to understand their needs, requirements, challenges and expectations in relation to the
potential use of ProACT.
Some of the major challenges identified in this research involve the lack of standardised,
integrated pathways for multimorbidity across the three countries. To better understand
pathways for chronic disease management, we reviewed and compared the British NHS NICE
pathways for single disease management of the ProACT conditions COPD, CHD, CHF and
Diabetes. We adapted these pathways for each of the four ProACT conditions, focusing on
those areas of relevance to the patient. We then compared these with existing pathways
identified in each region. From this process, we identified 4 important steps within each
individual disease pathway, as well as general older adult care pathways. 

These are: diagnosis, development of a holistic care plan,management of the medical and social conditions (remaining stable or improving), and, managing exacerbations

These aspects of care will form the basis of ProACT and were further examined during the
requirements gathering phase, to identify challenges faced by stakeholders along these
pathways and how ProACT might support them. A key intersection where information
exchange and service capacity is poorly coordinated and organised will be filled by the ProACT
system. Thus, ProACT will collect and analyse data from PwMs and support actors via
technology to improve the connections and flow between care delivery locations and improve
intelligent decision making support. The outcome will be to increase PwM (and if available
informal carers) capacity to inform home-based self-care by directing relevant support actors
and services; improve the ability of services to understand the best delivery of care; provide
24/7 real time feedback to key support actors and services; provide information on the PwM
at home and in the community. The approach will improve visibility of the PwM’s activity to
support service delivery.