Use of Telemedicine Technologies in Diabetes Prevention and Control in Resource-Constrained Settings: Lessons Learned from Emerging Economies

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Abstract

Telemedicine is a promising strategy that utilizes telecommunication to provide health care in remote areas, facilitating beneficial interaction between the health care provider and people in rural areas and making affordable and accessible medical care available to remote, inaccessible areas of the world. This article provides an overview of some of the ways telemedicine is improving diabetes care outcomes at the community level. Telemedicine can play a number of roles in moving quality diabetes care forward. It is currently being used to create awareness among urban and rural population about the risk factors and prevention of diabetes; to facilitate patient monitoring; for remote diabetic retinopathy screening; and in diabetes prevention at the primary, secondary, and tertiary level. We also highlight the use of automated artificial intelligence software combined with telemedicine to conduct efficient real-time screening of complications such as diabetic retinopathy in remote areas where such facilities are currently unavailable.

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Pradeepa, R., Rajalakshmi, R., & Mohan, V. (2019). Use of Telemedicine Technologies in Diabetes Prevention and Control in Resource-Constrained Settings: Lessons Learned from Emerging Economies. Diabetes Technology and Therapeutics, 21(S2), S2-9-S2-16. https://doi.org/10.1089/dia.2019.0038

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