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Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus (CODIAC) 2021: user involvement in diabetes care, prevention and research

Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus (CODIAC) 2021: user involvement in diabetes care, prevention and research
Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus (CODIAC) 2021: user involvement in diabetes care, prevention and research
Aims
User involvement is pivotal for health development, but there are significant gaps in our understanding of the concept. The Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus on User Involvement in Diabetes Care, Prevention and Research (CODIAC) was established to address these gaps, share knowledge and develop best practices.

Methods
A literature review of user involvement was undertaken in diabetes care, prevention and research. Moreover, a Group Concept Mapping (GCM) survey synthesized the knowledge and opinions of researchers, healthcare professionals and people with diabetes and their carers to identify gaps between what is important for user involvement and what is being done in practice. Finally, a consensus conference discussed the main gaps in knowledge and practice while developing plans to address the shortcomings.

Results
The literature review demonstrated that user involvement is an effective strategy for diabetes care, prevention and research, given the right support and conditions, but gaps and key challenges regarding the value and impact of user involvement approaches were found. The GCM process identified 11 major gaps, where important issues were not being sufficiently practised. The conference considered these gaps and opportunities to develop new collaborative initiatives under eight overall themes.

Conclusions
User involvement is effective and adds value to diabetes care, prevention and research when used under the right circumstances. CODIAC developed new learning about the way in which academic and research knowledge can be transferred to more practice-oriented knowledge and concrete collaborative initiatives. This approach may be a potential new framework for initiatives in which coherence of process can lead to coherent outputs.
0742-3071
Bloch, Paul
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Dadaczynski, Kevin
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Grabowski, Dan
173a6dbc-a76f-49f6-96fe-37e050ddd9c3
Lomborg, Kirsten Elisabeth
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Olesen, Kasper
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Rasmussen, Lauge Neimann
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Rossing, Peter
8bd64cce-f3b3-4cc8-bae7-237620d27d30
Varming, Annemarie
81997ea6-60aa-43f3-a033-b20612b25866
Willaing, Ingrid
3ec9fef8-11a2-4bb1-be34-4af0f08f08f7
Harris, Janet
1ce9da3e-275b-4aa1-ae74-dad0c2b6fe95
Holt, Richard
d54202e1-fcf6-4a17-a320-9f32d7024393
Jensen, Bjarne Bruun
b68c3a0f-cee7-4e50-ab03-c3a11550ce27
Bloch, Paul
5dae21bf-d427-45d3-b091-8fc75d909836
Dadaczynski, Kevin
2237f173-7a51-4ebe-9259-b3492de2917f
Grabowski, Dan
173a6dbc-a76f-49f6-96fe-37e050ddd9c3
Lomborg, Kirsten Elisabeth
335ddebd-eba2-4b2f-971d-1546ad74b8e1
Olesen, Kasper
2a6b2e15-51f6-455e-b4ce-4c47def92aaa
Rasmussen, Lauge Neimann
f2e3bcdb-1468-4643-bea2-fe31944000ac
Rossing, Peter
8bd64cce-f3b3-4cc8-bae7-237620d27d30
Varming, Annemarie
81997ea6-60aa-43f3-a033-b20612b25866
Willaing, Ingrid
3ec9fef8-11a2-4bb1-be34-4af0f08f08f7
Harris, Janet
1ce9da3e-275b-4aa1-ae74-dad0c2b6fe95
Holt, Richard
d54202e1-fcf6-4a17-a320-9f32d7024393
Jensen, Bjarne Bruun
b68c3a0f-cee7-4e50-ab03-c3a11550ce27

Bloch, Paul, Dadaczynski, Kevin, Grabowski, Dan, Lomborg, Kirsten Elisabeth, Olesen, Kasper, Rasmussen, Lauge Neimann, Rossing, Peter, Varming, Annemarie, Willaing, Ingrid, Harris, Janet, Holt, Richard and Jensen, Bjarne Bruun (2023) Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus (CODIAC) 2021: user involvement in diabetes care, prevention and research. Diabetic Medicine, 41 (1), [e15160]. (doi:10.1111/dme.15160).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aims
User involvement is pivotal for health development, but there are significant gaps in our understanding of the concept. The Copenhagen Diabetes Consensus on User Involvement in Diabetes Care, Prevention and Research (CODIAC) was established to address these gaps, share knowledge and develop best practices.

Methods
A literature review of user involvement was undertaken in diabetes care, prevention and research. Moreover, a Group Concept Mapping (GCM) survey synthesized the knowledge and opinions of researchers, healthcare professionals and people with diabetes and their carers to identify gaps between what is important for user involvement and what is being done in practice. Finally, a consensus conference discussed the main gaps in knowledge and practice while developing plans to address the shortcomings.

Results
The literature review demonstrated that user involvement is an effective strategy for diabetes care, prevention and research, given the right support and conditions, but gaps and key challenges regarding the value and impact of user involvement approaches were found. The GCM process identified 11 major gaps, where important issues were not being sufficiently practised. The conference considered these gaps and opportunities to develop new collaborative initiatives under eight overall themes.

Conclusions
User involvement is effective and adds value to diabetes care, prevention and research when used under the right circumstances. CODIAC developed new learning about the way in which academic and research knowledge can be transferred to more practice-oriented knowledge and concrete collaborative initiatives. This approach may be a potential new framework for initiatives in which coherence of process can lead to coherent outputs.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 June 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477427
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477427
ISSN: 0742-3071
PURE UUID: 27ce43ba-d44a-4f41-836e-9f4c4ab2396a
ORCID for Richard Holt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8911-6744

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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2023 16:55
Last modified: 17 Aug 2024 01:37

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Contributors

Author: Paul Bloch
Author: Kevin Dadaczynski
Author: Dan Grabowski
Author: Kirsten Elisabeth Lomborg
Author: Kasper Olesen
Author: Lauge Neimann Rasmussen
Author: Peter Rossing
Author: Annemarie Varming
Author: Ingrid Willaing
Author: Janet Harris
Author: Richard Holt ORCID iD
Author: Bjarne Bruun Jensen

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