Five years into the Israeli National Diabetes Program - are we on the right track?
Orly TamirArnon AfekMordechai ShaniAvivit CahnItamar RazPublished in: Diabetes/metabolism research and reviews (2020)
Diabetes mellitus poses major public health and economic challenges which necessitate national-level intervention. The ultimate goal of the Israel National Diabetes Program is to ensure that all people with diabetes, or at high risk of developing diabetes, will live well and have access to high-quality services that meet their individual needs. The integrated National Diabetes Program in Israel was established in 2014. Prevailing needs were identified and working groups assigned to delineate deficiencies and propose mode of action. Program leaders summarized and prioritized the needs, and identified main targets of action for the preliminary years. The program was achieved by a combined approach: top-bottom, having the Director General of the Ministry of Health (MoH) personally involved, and bottom-up, by routine meetings with representatives of the health organizations, clinical experts, patient representatives and other stakeholders. Main achievements during the first five years of the program included setting up a novel funding mechanism for diabetes prevention, substantiating the field of diabetes education in Israel, designing the infrastructure of diabetic foot care in Israel, updating the national health-budget allocation formula with incentives to improve provision of services, and promoting a mandatory system for judgemental labelling of food products. The program is in progress with ongoing monitoring, evaluation and improvement with particular emphasis on translational learning. Although there is much to be done, diabetes care in Israel has taken an enormous step forward in the past five years.
Keyphrases
- quality improvement
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- cardiovascular disease
- public health
- healthcare
- mental health
- randomized controlled trial
- primary care
- palliative care
- skeletal muscle
- risk assessment
- hiv infected
- smoking cessation
- climate change
- preterm infants
- pain management
- human milk
- men who have sex with men
- social media
- preterm birth
- low birth weight