The Communication Challenges in Digital Therapeutics and Prediabetes

The Communication Challenges in Digital Therapeutics and Prediabetes

The Communication Challenges in Digital Therapeutics and Prediabetes

This morning, on 9th June 2023, I read a report in ‘The Times of India’ which was very disturbing. “India now has more than 101 million people living with diabetes compared to 70 million people in 2019”. The news goes on to say: “This warrants urgent attention” and over 136 million people or 15.3 percent of India’s population are prediabetic.

This means, delaying the progression of prediabetics to diabetics is currently the biggest challenge in healthcare. And digital technologies like digital therapeutics can be a good option.

But is Digital Therapeutics (DTx) known to the general public in India?

I called up a few friends who were well placed in their professions like; a Director and Vice President of an international bank, a retired professor of English, a teacher of Physics in one of the most reputed schools of Mumbai, a M. Tech from IIT-Mumbai and so on. Shockingly, they had NOT EVEN HEARD of digital therapeutics.

Spreading the awareness of digital therapeutics and using it to delay the progression of prediabetics to diabetics is an enormous task. And this where companies in digital therapeutics can collaborate with the pharmaco’s or endocrinologists societies to help these prediabetics and help India.

Digital therapeutics is a broad and organized system integrating dietary changes, exercise routine, continuous monitoring and even personalization. Since diabetes is long-term, doctors can safely endorse digital therapeutics as it can help in better medication adherence and superior sugar control. Continuous glucose monitors via apps in smartphones can provide the prediabetics with nudges and alerts.

Overcoming the communication challenges

You have a two-fold challenge: Creating awareness of digital therapeutics amongst the general public and also addressing the benefits of digital therapeutics amongst th 136 million prediabetic populace.

Undoubtedly, digital therapeutics is preparing for a take-off in our country. By 2030, possibly it will be very popular as more and more are becoming digitally intelligent. Understanding the hurdles and the stumbling blocks to the adoption of digital therapeutics is the key to understanding how the hurdles can be overcome.

Social media can be harnessed for creating awareness of digital therapeutics. Social media has a promising future in healthcare, especially with regard to patient engagement and empowerment. Realization is dawning gradually that social media can provide a platform for patients to gather information, explore options, and share their experiences. Social media provide online platforms for interactions to occur around various health topics relating to patient education. Social media include various technological approaches such as blogs, micro-blogging (e.g. Twitter), social networking (e.g. Facebook and LinkedIn), video-sharing sites (e.g. YouTube),

Then you have smartphone apps. These apps must be very simple to understand and use. You can communicate two very vital patient-centered messages.

??????i.?????????How using DTx, can enhance patient’s adherence to therapy. High adherence to treatment translates into a better delay in the progression of prediabetes.?Non-adherence on the other hand, not only affects both individual patients and the healthcare system, it may even result in to an earlier onset of diabetes.

?

?????ii.?????????You can also communicate how digital therapeutics can play a complementary role in prediabetes management by supporting people with psychological support, and education.

Using your imagination, you can think have more means to spread the awareness both of digital therapeutics and the risks and perils of prediabetes.

What can you communicate to doctors?

To popularise, digital therapeutics, the first thing is that doctors must be made aware that digital therapeutics is not a threat to their practice or their patients.

The use of digital therapeutics is inevitable in the future. And this is what doctors need to communicate to the prediabetic population. But will the doctors feel comfortable to tell their patients about the use of DTx? Is it an existential threat to them? Such questions may certainly cross the minds of a few conservative doctors with a fixed mindset.

Like AI, DTx can be seen as both a threat and an opportunity for doctors, depending on how they approach and adapt to this emerging field.

DTx can automate many aspects of healthcare, potentially reducing the need for direct doctor involvement in some routine tasks like ordering and interpreting laboratory and diagnostic test results or prescribing medications.

DTx also presents an opportunity for doctors to enhance care of the prediabetes populace. DTx can serve as tools that augment the doctor’s ability to monitor Hb1Ac levels, and manage them effectively. They can leverage these digital solutions to access real-time data, track progress, and receive alerts or recommendations based on advanced algorithms and machine learning. By incorporating DTx into their practice, doctors can delay the progression to diabetes and provide more personalized care in this process.

If the doctors have this attitude, they will be too happy to communicate the benefits of DTx to patients. This is because digital therapeutics also presents an opportunity for doctors to enhance patient care.

Doctors with high levels of integrity towards patients will certainly share such information with them.

Doctors should also realize that the patients, especially the younger patients are getting more and more digitally intelligent. By 2030, I see an environment that if any doctor does not use DTx apps, the digitally intelligent patient may potentially even look down at such a doctor as a quack.

Doctors therefore should look at digital therapeutics as something which can enhance their own image and reputation and increase their practice. Patients will also see them as one who is in the forefront of healthcare advancements and can deliver more effective, personalized treatments.

What can you communicate to the pre-diabetes populace?

Doctors and DTx companies can then tell the patients that DTx apps can augment his own ability to monitor and treat patients effectively. doctors can communicate to their patients how these DTx apps can help him/her to access real-time patient data, track treatment progress, and how they can receive alerts or recommendations.

Doctors can tell the patients upfront how these DTx apps can delay the progression to diabetes and even provide individualized and personalized care.

Patients need to be told how many people like them struggle with adhering to prescribed medications and implementing the behavioural and lifestyle changes that are needed to manage and stabilize their prediabetes conditions. Prediabetes seldom needs medication but necessitates regular monitoring of Hb1Ac levels and lifestyle changes. Hence, doctors need better end-to-end solutions that proactively and comprehensively monitor the health of the prediabetic.

Doctors can tell the prediabetic that DTx can also offer self-guided interventions, personalized treatment plans, and remote monitoring capabilities, enabling the prediabetic populace to manage their conditions more independently. This could potentially reduce the number of visits to doctors for minor issues, freeing up a doctors time for more complex cases.

DTx can encourage behavioural changes to improve adherence to suggested therapies including non-pharmacological therapies, diet, and lifestyles.

Conclusion: Successful integration of DTx needs patient engagement and adoption. Effective communication strategies can include creating awareness of DTx amongst doctors and the prediabetic populace, clear instructions, and on-going support. This may involve providing information through omnichannel communication and even personalized messaging. These can promote acceptance and encourage them to incorporate DTx into their prediabetes management plans. ?

Vivek Hattangadi ?

?

Bhavesh Vyas

Expanding health education access at docfliq ∣ Senior healthcare leader with proven track record in Pharma, Start-ups & Hospitals in India ∣ Guest speaker & Mentor∣

1 年

Vivek Hattangadi Sir, Compliments for a very well written article. Having experienced the early life of a DTx company Fitterfly, the intent and effort are serious. To create awareness, experience, or enroll huge efforts are needed in terms of Tan, Man, and most importantly Dhan.

Pranav Kumar

Chair -CXPA Asia (Customer Experience Professional Association). Secretary- Infection Control Academy of India. Expert in Learning Experience Design, Customer/Patient Experience, Digital Marketing in Healthcare & Pharma.

1 年

Lovely article, inspiring and giving some hope to handle huge burden of diabetics and pre-diabetics, more that a quarter of adult population in India. Happy to see that some of the major Pharma is also investing on DTx. This problem and so huge that the current approach of management of Type 2DM will not work. Need some thing radical and I do agree with Vivek Hattangadi that DTx has a lot role to play. Many startup are actively working on it.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Vivek Hattangadi的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了