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Dive into the research topics where Johan Wens is active.

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Featured researches published by Johan Wens.


Diabetic Medicine | 2013

Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs second study (DAWN2™): Cross‐national benchmarking of diabetes‐related psychosocial outcomes for people with diabetes

Antonio Nicolucci; K. Kovacs Burns; Richard I. G. Holt; M. Comaschi; Norbert Hermanns; H. Ishii; Andrzej Kokoszka; F. Pouwer; S. E. Skovlund; Heather L. Stuckey; I. Tarkun; Michael Vallis; Johan Wens; Mark Peyrot

The second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) study aimed to assess psychosocial outcomes in people with diabetes across countries for benchmarking.


Hormone and Metabolic Research | 2010

Take Action to Prevent Diabetes – The IMAGE Toolkit for the Prevention of Type 2 Diabetes in Europe

Jaana Lindström; A. Neumann; Kate Sheppard; Aleksandra Gilis-Januszewska; Colin J Greaves; U. Handke; P. Pajunen; S. Puhl; A. Pölönen; Aila Rissanen; Michael Roden; T. Stemper; V. Telle-Hjellset; J. Tuomilehto; D. Velickiene; Peter Schwarz; Tania Acosta; Martin Adler; A. AlKerwi; Noël C. Barengo; R. Barengo; Jm Boavida; K. Charlesworth; V. Christov; B. Claussen; X. Cos; E Cosson; S. Deceukelier; V. Dimitrijevic-Sreckovic; Pb Djordjevic

When we ask people what they value most, health is usually top of the list. While effective care is available for many chronic diseases, the fact remains that for the patient, the tax payer and the whole of society: prevention is better than cure. Diabetes and its complications are a serious threat to the survival and well-being of an increasing number of people. It is predicted that one in ten Europeans aged 20-79 will have developed diabetes by 2030. Once a disease of old age, diabetes is now common among adults of all ages and is beginning to affect adolescents and even children. Diabetes accounts for up to 18 % of total healthcare expenditure in Europe. The good news is that diabetes is preventable. Compelling evidence shows that the onset of diabetes can be prevented or delayed greatly in individuals at high risk (people with impaired glucose regulation). Clinical research has shown a reduction in risk of developing diabetes of over 50 % following relatively modest changes in lifestyle that include adopting a healthy diet, increasing physical activity, and maintaining a healthy body weight. These results have since been reproduced in real-world prevention programmes. Even a delay of a few years in the progression to diabetes is expected to reduce diabetes-related complications, such as heart, kidney and eye disease and, consequently, to reduce the cost to society. A comprehensive approach to diabetes prevention should combine population based primary prevention with programmes targeted at those who are at high risk. This approach should take account of the local circumstances and diversity within modern society (e.g. social inequalities). The challenge goes beyond the healthcare system. We need to encourage collaboration across many different sectors: education providers, non-governmental organisations, the food industry, the media, urban planners and politicians all have a very important role to play. Small changes in lifestyle will bring big changes in health. Through joint efforts, more people will be reached. The time to act is now.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2013

Diabetes Attitudes Wishes and Needs 2 (DAWN2): A multinational, multi-stakeholder study of psychosocial issues in diabetes and person-centred diabetes care

Mark Peyrot; Katharina Kovacs Burns; Melanie J. Davies; Angus Forbes; Norbert Hermanns; Richard I. G. Holt; Sanjay Kalra; Antonio Nicolucci; Frans Pouwer; Johan Wens; Ingrid Willaing; Soren E. Skovlund

AIMS The Diabetes Attitudes Wishes and Needs 2 (DAWN2) study aims to provide a holistic assessment of diabetes care and management among people with diabetes (PWD), family members (FM), and healthcare professionals (HCPs) and explores potential drivers leading to active management. METHODS DAWN2 survey over 16,000 individuals (∼9000 PWD, ∼2000 FM of PWD, and ∼5000 HCPs) in 17 countries across 4 continents. Respondents complete a group-specific questionnaire; items are designed to allow cross-group comparisons on common topics. The questionnaires comprise elements from the original DAWN study (2001), as well as psychometrically validated instruments and novel questions developed for this study to assess self-management, attitudes/beliefs, disease impact/burden, psychosocial distress, health-related quality of life, healthcare provision/receipt, social support and priorities for improvement in the future. The questionnaires are completed predominantly online or by telephone interview, supplemented by face-to-face interviews in countries with low internet access. In each country, recruitment ensures representation of the diabetes population in terms of geographical distribution, age, gender, education and disease status. DISCUSSION DAWN2 aims to build on the original DAWN study to identify new avenues for improving diabetes care. This paper describes the study rationale, goals and methodology.


Diabetic Medicine | 2013

Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs second study (DAWN2™): Cross‐national benchmarking indicators for family members living with people with diabetes

K. Kovacs Burns; Antonio Nicolucci; Richard I. G. Holt; Ingrid Willaing; Norbert Hermanns; Sanjay Kalra; Johan Wens; F. Pouwer; S. E. Skovlund; Mark Peyrot

The second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) study examined the experiences of family members of people with diabetes for benchmarking and identifying unmet needs or areas for improvement to assist family members and those with diabetes to effectively self‐manage.


Diabetic Medicine | 2013

Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs second study (DAWN2™): cross-national comparisons on barriers and resources for optimal care--healthcare professional perspective.

Richard I. G. Holt; Antonio Nicolucci; K. Kovacs Burns; M. Escalante; Angus Forbes; Norbert Hermanns; Sanjay Kalra; M. Massi-Benedetti; A. Mayorov; E. Menéndez-Torre; N. Munro; S. E. Skovlund; I. Tarkun; Johan Wens; Mark Peyrot

The second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) study sought cross‐national comparisons of perceptions on healthcare provision for benchmarking and sharing of clinical practices to improve diabetes care.


Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics | 2006

Interventions to improve adherence to medication in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a review of the literature on the role of pharmacists

Antje Lindenmeyer; Hilary Hearnshaw; Etienne Vermeire; P. Van Royen; Johan Wens; Y. Biot

Background and objective:  Pharmacists are now adopting a crucial role in the management of chronic illness in primary care, providing diabetes care and advice. This review aims to show whether a range of diabetes care interventions delivered by pharmacists is successful in improving adherence to medication.


Primary Care Diabetes | 2007

Obstacles to adherence in living with type-2 diabetes: An international qualitative study using meta-ethnography (EUROBSTACLE)

Etienne Vermeire; Hilary Hearnshaw; Anneli Rätsep; Gwenola Levasseur; Davorina Petek; Henk A. van Dam; Frans van der Horst; Nevenka Vinter-Repalust; Johan Wens; Jeremy Dale; Paul Van Royen

Quantitative studies failed to determine variables which consistently explain adherence or non-adherence to treatment recommendations. Qualitative studies identified issues such as the quality of the health provider-health receiver relationship and the patients health beliefs. According to these findings, 39 focus groups of 246 people living with type-2 diabetes were conducted in seven European countries, assessing health beliefs, communication with caregivers and problems encountered in adhering to treatment regimens. Meta-ethnography was later applied to make a qualitative meta-analysis. Obstacles to adherence are common across countries, and seem to be related less to issues of the health-care system and more to patients knowledge about diabetes, beliefs and attitudes and the relationship with health-care professionals. The resulting key themes are course of diabetes, information, person and context, body awareness and relationship with the health care provider. Meta-ethnography is a feasible tool for the meta-analysis of multilingual qualitative data and leads to a richer account.


Primary Care Diabetes | 2009

Supporting diabetes self-management in primary care: Pilot-study of a group-based programme focusing on diet and exercise

Hilde Bastiaens; Patricia Sunaert; Johan Wens; Bernard Sabbe; Lutgarde Jenkins; Frank Nobels; Boris Snauwaert; Paul Van Royen

AIMS To develop and implement a group self-management education programme for people with type 2 diabetes at the community level in primary care. This pilot-study intended to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability and long-term effects (12-18 months) of this programme on emotional distress, HbA1c, BMI and actual behaviour. METHODS An empowerment-based, theory-driven education programme was evaluated in a before-after design. The programme focused on behaviour assessment, goal-setting, problem solving and tailored information. A diabetes specialist nurse conjointly with a dietician or psychologist led five 2-hour sessions and a follow-up meeting after 3 months. RESULTS Forty-four people participated in 5 groups. BMI decreased with 0.45 kg/m(2) (95%CI 0.01-0.89) at 12-month and with 0.53 kg/m(2) (95%CI 0.02-1.04) at 18-month follow-up. HbA1c declined from 7.4% (+/-1.3) to 6.8% (+/-0.8) (p=0.040) and the PAID-score diminished from 28 (+/-20) to 18 (+/-13) (p=0.006) at 12-month post-intervention. These changes were only partly sustained at 18-month follow-up. Actual behaviour changed modestly. CONCLUSION Introducing the group education programme in primary healthcare is worthwhile (feasibility and effectiveness). A detailed description of the intervention is offered. Further research should explore the actual education process in greater depth.


Diabetes Care | 2014

Personal Accounts of the Negative and Adaptive Psychosocial Experiences of People With Diabetes in the Second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) Study

Heather L. Stuckey; Christine Mullan-Jensen; G. Reach; Katharina Kovacs Burns; Natalia Piana; Michael Vallis; Johan Wens; Ingrid Willaing; Soren E. Skovlund; Mark Peyrot

OBJECTIVE To identify the psychosocial experiences of diabetes, including negative accounts of diabetes and adaptive ways of coping from the perspective of the person with diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Participants were 8,596 adults (1,368 with type 1 diabetes and 7,228 with type 2 diabetes) in the second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) study. Qualitative data were responses to open-ended survey questions about successes, challenges, and wishes for improvement in living with diabetes and about impactful experiences. Emergent coding developed with multinational collaborators identified thematic content about psychosocial aspects. The κ measure of interrater reliability was 0.72. RESULTS Analysis identified two negative psychosocial themes: 1) anxiety/fear, worry about hypoglycemia and complications of diabetes, depression, and negative moods/hopelessness and 2) discrimination at work and public misunderstanding about diabetes. Two psychosocial themes demonstrated adaptive ways of coping with diabetes: 1) having a positive outlook and sense of resilience in the midst of having diabetes and 2) receiving psychosocial support through caring and compassionate family, friends, health care professionals, and other people with diabetes. CONCLUSIONS The personal accounts give insight into the psychosocial experiences and coping strategies of people with diabetes and can inform efforts to meet those needs and capitalize on strengths.


Advances in medical education and practice | 2014

Factors associated with clinical inertia: an integrative review.

Isabelle Aujoulat; Patricia Jacquemin; Ernst Rietzschel; André Scheen; Patrick Tréfois; Johan Wens; E Darras; Michel P. Hermans

Failure to initiate or intensify therapy according to evidence-based guidelines is increasingly being acknowledged as a phenomenon that contributes to inadequate management of chronic conditions, and is referred to as clinical inertia. However, the number and complexity of factors associated with the clinical reasoning that underlies the decision-making processes in medicine calls for a critical examination of the consistency of the concept. Indeed, in the absence of information on and justification of treatment decisions that were made, clinical inertia may be only apparent, and actually reflect good clinical practice. This integrative review seeks to address the factors generally associated with clinical inaction, in order to better delineate the concept of true clinical inertia.

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Ann Stes

University of Antwerp

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Geert Goderis

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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