npj Digital Medicine (Nov 2024)

The adaptation of a single institution diabetes care platform into a nationally available turnkey solution

  • Gloria Y. K. Kim,
  • Rea Rostosky,
  • Franziska K. Bishop,
  • Kelly Watson,
  • Priya Prahalad,
  • Aishwari Vaidya,
  • Sharon Lee,
  • Alexander Diana,
  • Clint Beacock,
  • Brian Chu,
  • Ginny Yadav,
  • Kaylin Rochford,
  • Carissa Carter,
  • Johannes O. Ferstad,
  • Erica Pang,
  • Jamie Kurtzig,
  • Brandon Arbiter,
  • Howard Look,
  • Ramesh Johari,
  • David M. Maahs,
  • David Scheinker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-024-01319-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Digital decision support and remote patient monitoring may improve outcomes and efficiency, but rarely scale beyond a single institution. Over the last 5 years, the platform Timely Interventions for Diabetes Excellence (TIDE) has been associated with reduced care provider screen time and improved, equitable type 1 diabetes care and outcomes for 268 patients in a heterogeneous population as part of the Teamwork, Targets, Technology, and Tight Control (4T) Study (NCT03968055, NCT04336969). Previous efforts to deploy TIDE at other institutions continue to face delays. In partnership with the diabetes technology non-profit, Tidepool, we developed Tidepool-TIDE, a clinic-agnostic, turnkey solution available to any clinic in the United States. We present how we overcame common technical and operational barriers specific to scaling digital health technology from one site to many. The concepts described are broadly applicable for institutions interested in facilitating broader adoption of digital technology for population-level management of chronic health conditions.