2012
DOI: 10.1179/2047971912y.0000000022
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Improving care for people living with chronic diseases: Innovative examples from Spain

Abstract: Purpose: Many countries around the world have been undertaking initiatives to promote the improvement of care for people with chronic diseases. The purpose of this article is to showcase some of the innovations developed in Spain, with emphasis on the societal burden of chronicity and the emergent challenge of polypathology. Methods: The database of the Observatory of Innovative Practices on Complex Chronic Disease Management (known in Spanish as OPIMEC and available at www.opimec.org) was used to identify inn… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Our most recent results, however, underline the need to keep making further efforts in the re-organisation of health provision specifically for the patients identified, who are those that will benefit the most from increasing care coordination. In this area, integrated care approaches for patients with multiple conditions are increasingly popular in Spain and preliminary evaluations seem promising in terms of their effectiveness [38] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our most recent results, however, underline the need to keep making further efforts in the re-organisation of health provision specifically for the patients identified, who are those that will benefit the most from increasing care coordination. In this area, integrated care approaches for patients with multiple conditions are increasingly popular in Spain and preliminary evaluations seem promising in terms of their effectiveness [38] .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, recent studies have defined this challenge as increasingly impelling over time due to demographic and epidemiological transformations underway. Many of these transformations reflect some of the specificities of haemophilia: in particular, literature has been focusing on the importance of promoting a model of integrated care for rare diseases [54] and for chronic diseases, which are constantly increasing [55][56][57], especially those at risk of co-morbidity [58,59].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, PA-owned practices can provide greater access, convenience and opportunity for routine care of chronic conditions, particularly to those underserved populations. In fact, Cabrera-León et al (2012) find that the issue of chronic disease care, especially in primary care, is one of the most important issues in current and future health-care management globally. Moschis and Friend (2008) find that slightly more than half (53.7 per cent) of Americans 55 years old and over have a chronic condition for which they take medication, resulting in the need for routine medical care and regular blood tests.…”
Section: Pa-owned and -Operated Practice As Disruptive Innovationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rural residents are more often uninsured than urban residents and more likely to report being in fair or poor health (Ricketts, 2000). These individuals are less likely to seek routine check-ups, including basic mammography services (Sanchez-Lezama et al , 2015), and are less likely to manage their chronic conditions (Cabrera-León et al , 2012). As a consequence, those individuals at the “bottom of the pyramid” constitute an important “missing market” (Pels and Kidd, 2015) that PA-owned practices can easily enter.…”
Section: Pa-owned and -Operated Practice As Disruptive Innovationmentioning
confidence: 99%