Journal of Medical Internet Research (Jun 2023)

GATEKEEPER’s Strategy for the Multinational Large-Scale Piloting of an eHealth Platform: Tutorial on How to Identify Relevant Settings and Use Cases

  • Jordi de Batlle,
  • Ivan D Benítez,
  • Anna Moncusí-Moix,
  • Odysseas Androutsos,
  • Rosana Angles Barbastro,
  • Alessio Antonini,
  • Eunate Arana,
  • Maria Fernanda Cabrera-Umpierrez,
  • Gloria Cea,
  • George Ε Dafoulas,
  • Frans Folkvord,
  • Ane Fullaondo,
  • Francesco Giuliani,
  • Hsiao-Ling Huang,
  • Pasquale F Innominato,
  • Przemyslaw Kardas,
  • Vivian W Q Lou,
  • Yannis Manios,
  • Maria Matsangidou,
  • Franco Mercalli,
  • Mounir Mokhtari,
  • Silvio Pagliara,
  • Julia Schellong,
  • Lisa Stieler,
  • Konstantinos Votis,
  • Paula Currás,
  • Maria Teresa Arredondo,
  • Jorge Posada,
  • Sergio Guillén,
  • Leandro Pecchia,
  • Ferran Barbé,
  • Gerard Torres,
  • Giuseppe Fico

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/42187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25
p. e42187

Abstract

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BackgroundThe World Health Organization’s strategy toward healthy aging fosters person-centered integrated care sustained by eHealth systems. However, there is a need for standardized frameworks or platforms accommodating and interconnecting multiple of these systems while ensuring secure, relevant, fair, trust-based data sharing and use. The H2020 project GATEKEEPER aims to implement and test an open-source, European, standard-based, interoperable, and secure framework serving broad populations of aging citizens with heterogeneous health needs. ObjectiveWe aim to describe the rationale for the selection of an optimal group of settings for the multinational large-scale piloting of the GATEKEEPER platform. MethodsThe selection of implementation sites and reference use cases (RUCs) was based on the adoption of a double stratification pyramid reflecting the overall health of target populations and the intensity of proposed interventions; the identification of a principles guiding implementation site selection; and the elaboration of guidelines for RUC selection, ensuring clinical relevance and scientific excellence while covering the whole spectrum of citizen complexities and intervention intensities. ResultsSeven European countries were selected, covering Europe’s geographical and socioeconomic heterogeneity: Cyprus, Germany, Greece, Italy, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. These were complemented by the following 3 Asian pilots: Hong Kong, Singapore, and Taiwan. Implementation sites consisted of local ecosystems, including health care organizations and partners from industry, civil society, academia, and government, prioritizing the highly rated European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Aging reference sites. RUCs covered the whole spectrum of chronic diseases, citizen complexities, and intervention intensities while privileging clinical relevance and scientific rigor. These included lifestyle-related early detection and interventions, using artificial intelligence–based digital coaches to promote healthy lifestyle and delay the onset or worsening of chronic diseases in healthy citizens; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and heart failure decompensations management, proposing integrated care management based on advanced wearable monitoring and machine learning (ML) to predict decompensations; management of glycemic status in diabetes mellitus, based on beat to beat monitoring and short-term ML-based prediction of glycemic dynamics; treatment decision support systems for Parkinson disease, continuously monitoring motor and nonmotor complications to trigger enhanced treatment strategies; primary and secondary stroke prevention, using a coaching app and educational simulations with virtual and augmented reality; management of multimorbid older patients or patients with cancer, exploring novel chronic care models based on digital coaching, and advanced monitoring and ML; high blood pressure management, with ML-based predictions based on different intensities of monitoring through self-managed apps; and COVID-19 management, with integrated management tools limiting physical contact among actors. ConclusionsThis paper provides a methodology for selecting adequate settings for the large-scale piloting of eHealth frameworks and exemplifies with the decisions taken in GATEKEEPER the current views of the WHO and European Commission while moving forward toward a European Data Space.