AI Article Synopsis

  • Transitional medicine ensures that patients with childhood-onset diseases receive continuous medical care as they transition into adulthood, particularly important for conditions like primary dyslipidemia.
  • Issues such as low diagnosis rates, insufficient specialist collaboration, and mismatched diagnostic criteria between pediatric and adult care hinder effective transitional care in Japan.
  • The review aims to highlight these transitional medicine problems related to primary dyslipidemia and seeks to inform efforts by the Committee on Primary Dyslipidemia to improve the situation.

Article Abstract

Transitional medicine refers to the seamless continuity of medical care for patients with childhood-onset diseases as they grow into adulthood. The transition of care must be seamless in medical treatment as the patients grow and in other medical aids such as subsidies for medical expenses in the health care system. Inappropriate transitional care, either medical or social, directly causes poorer prognosis for many early-onset diseases, including primary dyslipidemia caused by genetic abnormalities. Many primary dyslipidemias are designated as intractable diseases in the Japanese health care system for specific medical aids, as having no curative treatment and requiring enormous treatment costs for lipid management and prevention of complications. However, there are problems in transitional medicine for primary dyslipidemia in Japan. As for the medical treatment system, the diagnosis rate remains low due to the shortage of specialists, their insufficient link with generalists and other field specialists, and poor linkage between pediatricians and physicians for adults. In the medical care system, there is a mismatch of diagnostic criteria of primary dyslipidemias between children and adults for medical care expense subsidization, as between The Program for the Specific Pediatric Chronic Diseases and the Program for Designated Adult Intractable Diseases. This could lead some patients subsidized in their childhood to no longer be under the coverage of the aids after transition. This review intends to describe these issues in transitional medicine of primary dyslipidemia in Japan as a part of the efforts to resolve the problems by the Committee on Primary Dyslipidemia under the Research Program on Rare and Intractable Disease of the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11079492PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5551/jat.RV22016DOI Listing

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