Abstract

More than 537 million adults worldwide are living with diabetes and navigating its health and lifestyle impact. People living with diabetes face unique challenges in managing their diet and exercise, monitoring their blood glucose, self-administering medications, and effectively integrating their disease into their social activities. In addition to diabetes being a challenging multifactorial disease, these challenges arise in part from patients having to navigate a complex ecosystem where sectors are siloed and its services, products, and environments are not designed with the patient in mind. To address these challenges, the ecosystem of diabetes care, including researchers, healthcare professionals, product and service developers, and policymakers, can adopt co-design methodologies providing patients and caregivers a seat at the table when creating solutions. Co-design in healthcare is an approach to problem-solving where patients are viewed as equal partners providing their own unique perspective and expertise, to design and develop devices, services, and environments. Co-design emphasizes the value of the user's insights and expertise. Incorporating patient perspective has been shown to increase patient empowerment and satisfaction, enhance healthcare technology value, and strengthen the collaboration between the patient and their interprofessional ecosystem. We describe opportunity spaces, successful examples, and strategies to better engage patients in research, policymaking, and healthcare product, service, and environment development through co-design methods. By incorporating co-design, the ecosystem of diabetes care can deliver more effective, high-quality patient-centered care, products, and services.

Full Text
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