Norwegian University Develops Self Help System To Monitor Diabetes Patients

Source: Norwegian Centre for Integrated Care and Telemedicine
Published Friday, 5 February, 2010 - 14:58

A PhD project at the NST has resulted in the development of a new self-help system for diabetes, based on a mobile telephone, blood glucose meter, and step counter. "We would never have succeeded in this without dedicated users," says researcher Eirik Årsand.

Together with the other researchers and the system developers in the diabetes team at the Norwegian Centre for Integrated Care and Telemedicine (NST), Årsand has spent the past four years developing this system in his PhD project.
Strong user loyalty to the system

"It would not been possible to develop this tool without involving people with diabetes over a period as long as two years," says Årsand, and adds that as far as he knows, there are no other equivalent projects that have included users to the extent that this project has.

The trials of the system that the users have helped to develop actually lasted half a year, but all the users were so pleased with it that they are still using the system nearly one and a half years after they received the equipment.

Wireless and automatic

Today, we have a mobile phone with us almost wherever we are – and this is the principle that inspired the system. In addition, telephones are becoming more like computers that you can use to phone people. This creates new opportunities.

"The blood glucose meter transmits the blood values wirelessly to the telephone, and so does the step counter that we developed two years ago. Dietary information is also easy for the user to enter. And the tool functions as a practical aid in everyday life," he adds.

All the values are collected and stored in the phone, and you can keep track of the trend in your blood glucose, how active you have been, and how successful you have been in maintaining healthy eating habits.

This feedback enables you to monitor and change both your diet and your activity level on the basis of your blood sugar values. The best-case result is a stable and healthy blood glucose level, which in turn reduces the risk of complications resulting from the illness.

Ready for large-scale testing in EU project

Testing so far has involved only 12 users, which is not enough to draw any clear conclusions about the medical effect of using the tool. However, the EU project "Renewing Health" – which starts in February – will give 200 people the opportunity to use the system...

This will provide a much better basis for finding out whether the "Few Touch" application does in fact help to improve eating habits, physical activity, and blood glucose values. And, in turn, the health of its users.

Comments from the 12 testers indicate that the equipment is easy to use, and that several of the participants have changed their medication, physical activity, and diet after starting to use the system.  

The PhD research was conducted at the University of Tromsø and the NST. The project was funded by the Committee for Telemedicine Research Programme at the Northern Norway Regional Health Authority and Tromsø Telemedicine Laboratory (TTL).