My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016

Abstract Background My Diabetes My Way (MDMW) is the National Health Service (NHS) Scotland website for people with diabetes and their carers. It consists of an interactive information website and an electronic personal health record (ePHR) available to the 291,981 people with diabetes in Scotland....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Scott Gordon Cunningham, Massimo Brillante, Brian Allardice, Nicholas Conway, Ritchie Robert McAlpine, Deborah Jane Wake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BioMedical Engineering OnLine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-019-0635-4
id doaj-31e9d7b2ee7843ccaceec1c6c2801443
record_format Article
spelling doaj-31e9d7b2ee7843ccaceec1c6c28014432020-11-25T01:16:33ZengBMCBioMedical Engineering OnLine1475-925X2019-02-0118111110.1186/s12938-019-0635-4My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016Scott Gordon Cunningham0Massimo Brillante1Brian Allardice2Nicholas Conway3Ritchie Robert McAlpine4Deborah Jane Wake5School of Medicine, University of DundeeSchool of Medicine, University of DundeeSchool of Medicine, University of DundeeSchool of Medicine, University of DundeeSchool of Medicine, University of DundeeUsher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of EdinburghAbstract Background My Diabetes My Way (MDMW) is the National Health Service (NHS) Scotland website for people with diabetes and their carers. It consists of an interactive information website and an electronic personal health record (ePHR) available to the 291,981 people with diabetes in Scotland. We aimed to analyse the demographic characteristics of current registrants and system usage and activity during 2016. Methods We analysed system audit trails to monitor user activity and page accesses on the information website, and logins and activity within the ePHR. The ePHR contains data from SCI-Diabetes, NHS Scotland’s flagship diabetes record, sourcing data from primary and secondary care, specialist screening services and laboratory systems. We reviewed patient registration characteristics to collate demographic data for the MWDH cohort, then compared this to aggregate data published in the 2016 Scottish Diabetes Survey. The Scottish Diabetes Survey is an annual population-based report detailing diabetes statistics for the whole diabetes population in NHS Scotland. Results The MDMW information website received an average of 101,382 page accesses per month during 2016 (56.9% increase from 2015; n = 64,607). ePHR registrants were more likely to be younger (p < 0.001) and have an ethnicity of “white” (p < 0.001) than the background diabetes population. At the end of 2016, 11,840 people with diabetes had accessed their personal clinical information (58.6% increase since end 2015; n = 7464). During 2016, an average of 1907 people accessed their records each month (48.3% increase from 2015; n = 1286). Conclusion My Diabetes My Way is a useful tool aid to diabetes self-management. The service is unique in offering records access to a national population, providing information from all relevant diabetes-related sources, rather than a single silo. MDMW supports the diabetes improvement, self-management, healthcare quality and eHealth strategies of the Scottish Government. The service also has potential to be adapted to work with other clinical systems and conditions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-019-0635-4DiabetesSelf-managementSelf-carePersonal health recordElectronic recordLong-term condition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Scott Gordon Cunningham
Massimo Brillante
Brian Allardice
Nicholas Conway
Ritchie Robert McAlpine
Deborah Jane Wake
spellingShingle Scott Gordon Cunningham
Massimo Brillante
Brian Allardice
Nicholas Conway
Ritchie Robert McAlpine
Deborah Jane Wake
My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
BioMedical Engineering OnLine
Diabetes
Self-management
Self-care
Personal health record
Electronic record
Long-term condition
author_facet Scott Gordon Cunningham
Massimo Brillante
Brian Allardice
Nicholas Conway
Ritchie Robert McAlpine
Deborah Jane Wake
author_sort Scott Gordon Cunningham
title My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
title_short My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
title_full My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
title_fullStr My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
title_full_unstemmed My Diabetes My Way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
title_sort my diabetes my way: supporting online diabetes self-management: progress and analysis from 2016
publisher BMC
series BioMedical Engineering OnLine
issn 1475-925X
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background My Diabetes My Way (MDMW) is the National Health Service (NHS) Scotland website for people with diabetes and their carers. It consists of an interactive information website and an electronic personal health record (ePHR) available to the 291,981 people with diabetes in Scotland. We aimed to analyse the demographic characteristics of current registrants and system usage and activity during 2016. Methods We analysed system audit trails to monitor user activity and page accesses on the information website, and logins and activity within the ePHR. The ePHR contains data from SCI-Diabetes, NHS Scotland’s flagship diabetes record, sourcing data from primary and secondary care, specialist screening services and laboratory systems. We reviewed patient registration characteristics to collate demographic data for the MWDH cohort, then compared this to aggregate data published in the 2016 Scottish Diabetes Survey. The Scottish Diabetes Survey is an annual population-based report detailing diabetes statistics for the whole diabetes population in NHS Scotland. Results The MDMW information website received an average of 101,382 page accesses per month during 2016 (56.9% increase from 2015; n = 64,607). ePHR registrants were more likely to be younger (p < 0.001) and have an ethnicity of “white” (p < 0.001) than the background diabetes population. At the end of 2016, 11,840 people with diabetes had accessed their personal clinical information (58.6% increase since end 2015; n = 7464). During 2016, an average of 1907 people accessed their records each month (48.3% increase from 2015; n = 1286). Conclusion My Diabetes My Way is a useful tool aid to diabetes self-management. The service is unique in offering records access to a national population, providing information from all relevant diabetes-related sources, rather than a single silo. MDMW supports the diabetes improvement, self-management, healthcare quality and eHealth strategies of the Scottish Government. The service also has potential to be adapted to work with other clinical systems and conditions.
topic Diabetes
Self-management
Self-care
Personal health record
Electronic record
Long-term condition
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12938-019-0635-4
work_keys_str_mv AT scottgordoncunningham mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
AT massimobrillante mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
AT brianallardice mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
AT nicholasconway mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
AT ritchierobertmcalpine mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
AT deborahjanewake mydiabetesmywaysupportingonlinediabetesselfmanagementprogressandanalysisfrom2016
_version_ 1725149455768879104