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    Improved diagnosis and care for rare diseases through implementation of precision public health framework

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Baynam, Gareth
    Bowman, F.
    Lister, K.
    Walker, C.
    Pachter, N.
    Goldblatt, J.
    Boycott, K.
    Gahl, W.
    Kosaki, K.
    Adachi, T.
    Ishii, K.
    Mahede, T.
    McKenzie, Fiona
    Townshend, S.
    Slee, J.
    Kiraly-Borri, C.
    Vasudevan, A.
    Hawkins, A.
    Broley, S.
    Schofield, L.
    Verhoef, H.
    Groza, T.
    Zankl, A.
    Robinson, P.
    Haendel, M.
    Brudno, M.
    Mattick, J.
    Dinger, M.
    Roscioli, T.
    Cowley, M.
    Olry, A.
    Hanauer, M.
    Alkuraya, F.
    Taruscio, D.
    Posada De La Paz, M.
    Lochmüller, H.
    Bushby, K.
    Thompson, R.
    Hedley, V.
    Lasko, P.
    Mina, K.
    Beilby, J.
    Tifft, C.
    Davis, M.
    Laing, N.
    Julkowska, D.
    Le Cam, Y.
    Terry, S.
    Kaufmann, P.
    Eerola, I.
    Norstedt, I.
    Rath, A.
    Suematsu, M.
    Groft, S.
    Austin, C.
    Draghia-Akli, R.
    Weeramanthri, Tarun
    Molster, C.
    Dawkins, Hugh
    Date
    2017
    Type
    Book Chapter
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Baynam, G. and Bowman, F. and Lister, K. and Walker, C. and Pachter, N. and Goldblatt, J. and Boycott, K. et al. 2017. Improved diagnosis and care for rare diseases through implementation of precision public health framework. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 55-94. Switzerland: Springer.
    Source Title
    Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
    DOI
    10.1007/978-3-319-67144-4_4
    ISBN
    978-3-319-67142-0
    School
    School of Earth and Planetary Sciences (EPS)
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/71926
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    © Springer International Publishing AG 2017. Public health relies on technologies to produce and analyse data, as well as effectively develop and implement policies and practices. An example is the public health practice of epidemiology, which relies on computational technology to monitor the health status of populations, identify disadvantaged or at risk population groups and thereby inform health policy and priority setting. Critical to achieving health improvements for the underserved population of people living with rare diseases is early diagnosis and best care. In the rare diseases field, the vast majority of diseases are caused by destructive but previously difficult to identify protein-coding gene mutations. The reduction in cost of genetic testing and advances in the clinical use of genome sequencing, data science and imaging are converging to provide more precise understandings of the ‘person-time-place’ triad. That is: who is affected (people); when the disease is occurring (time); and where the disease is occurring (place). Consequently we are witnessing a paradigm shift in public health policy and practice towards ‘precision public health’. Patient and stakeholder engagement has informed the need for a national public health policy framework for rare diseases. The engagement approach in different countries has produced highly comparable outcomes and objectives. Knowledge and experience sharing across the international rare diseases networks and partnerships has informed the development of the Western Australian Rare Diseases Strategic Framework 2015?2018 (RD Framework) and Australian government health briefings on the need for a National plan. The RD Framework is guiding the translation of genomic and other technologies into the Western Australian health system, leading to greater precision in diagnostic pathways and care, and is an example of how a precision public health framework can improve health outcomes for the rare diseases population. Five vignettes are used to illustrate how policy decisions provide the scaffolding for translation of new genomics knowledge, and catalyze transformative change in delivery of clinical services. The vignettes presented here are from an Australian perspective and are not intended to be comprehensive, but rather to provide insights into how a new and emerging ‘precision public health’ paradigm can improve the experiences of patients living with rare diseases, their caregivers and families. The conclusion is that genomic public health is informed by the individual and family needs, and the population health imperatives of an early and accurate diagnosis; which is the portal to best practice care. Knowledge sharing is critical for public health policy development and improving the lives of people living with rare diseases.

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