Archive for November, 2011

Is the UK leading global innovation?

Saturday, November 26th, 2011

This week I had the pleasure to attend the eHealth 2011 conference in Malaga. Driving in the fog to Gatwick, I was feeling slightly boyish that soon I would be walking along the sunny pavements of Malaga and getting my dose of vitamin D. How wrong could I have been. I arrived in one of the worst rain storms that Andalucía had seen in some months. Perhaps Spain isn’t so different from the UK after all.

However, what I heard this week simply endorsed my understanding that healthcare globally is going through major reforms to improve performance, such as the measurement of clinical outcomes and encouraging patients to take more responsibility in decisions around their own care. A bit like finding the Holy Grail I have often thought. But what I discovered is that the route many countries are taking is not to dissimilar to our approach in the UK and more specifically in England with the Information Revolution.

One of the key messages at almost any conference in any country I attend is that there is unanimous agreement that by involving the population in their own healthcare, significant reductions in costs can be made. In fact some researchers estimate that costs could be reduced by almost 20%. If these estimations are true, ensuring people take ownership of their health would certainly make the £20 billion savings over next four years – often know as QIPP or more frequently ‘the Nicholson Challenge’ – more realistic and achievable whilst simultaneously improving patient care.

So, what is the driver to make this happen and what will push forward the QIPP agenda? History tells us that in austere times innovation will be key.

Research recently carried out by Professor Sir Brian Jarman, into hospital mortality rates in England, found that the number of deaths in hospitals are more closely related to the number of GPs in the area it serves, than to the number of doctors in the hospital itself. Surely this is proof that it is time to grasp innovative thinking and extend support for the case to develop the virtual hospital – sometimes known as a hospital without walls.

In addition, if we want to see better health outcomes, improved equity, patient involvement, access and lower costs, then we need to focus more resources on primary and social care as well as general practice. Health systems dominated by specialist secondary care ‘have higher total costs and reduced access’, a recent World Health Organisation report says. There is clearly room for innovation here.

Given that there is no extra cash in the system, I eagerly wait to see how innovative we can become in order to improve the quality and access to healthcare in this country. After recently witnessing and enthusiastically applauding the winners at the recent HSJ Awards and eHealth Insider Awards, it is clear that there are examples of great innovation scattered across the country. My plea is that we can develop a way in which this good practice is disseminated across a federated NHS.

Jeremy Nettle,
Chair of Intellect Healthcare Group

Healthcare price cuts and CCG mergers

Friday, November 25th, 2011

The NHS operational plan for 2012-13 will impose a 1.5% cut in the prices providers can charge commissioners. CCG funding is also to be limited to £25 per patient, which Pulse suggests will bring a wave of mergers.

Medical imaging boom

Friday, November 25th, 2011

The global market for 3D medical imaging is forecast to reach $5.9 billion by 2017, with Europe as the largest regional market, according to a Global Industry Analysts.

Better model for predicting NHS commissioning

Friday, November 25th, 2011

A new model for predicting GPs’ future spending could mean a major change in the funding formula for commissioners Pulse reports.

Quicker EPR brings delays

Friday, November 25th, 2011

Oxford University Hospitals Trust has warned outpatients of administrative delays while staff get used to a new £15.7m Cerner EPR. The trust says the system will be more streamlined making information more accessible to staff.

IMS MAXIMS senior executive co-authors industry paper praising government strategy but calls for further improvements

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

London, UK – 23rd November 2011 – A new report calls on the Department of Health to strengthen its efforts to encourage data sharing in the NHS. Paul Cooper, IMS MAXIMS Head of Research, co-authored ‘We Should Talk: Interoperability and the NHS’, on behalf of Intellect, the trade association representing the UK’s IT, electronics and telecoms industries. The document scrutinises the effectiveness of the Interoperability Toolkit (ITK) – a set of standards and frameworks designed to help the NHS across England to connect IT systems with one another.

The report praises much about the ITK, especially its recognition that the greatest benefits can be achieved at a local level, and that some interoperability is better than none. It goes on to recommend that far more needs to be done to engage suppliers and says a major drive is needed to persuade many people within the NHS that interoperability is vital to the success of their organisations.

Paul Cooper said: “There is a huge problem in the NHS because many of the IT systems cannot talk to each other. This means that staff often can’t get access to the information they need. Clinicians can only do the best for patients if they have all the relevant information about their conditions, and hospitals can only deliver efficient services if they have the data to identify bottlenecks in their systems or areas of waste.

“An efficient healthcare system, which delivers the best for patients and makes effective use of resources, can only exist if data can be shared within and between organisations. The good news is that these problems can be overcome and that everyone within the healthcare IT sector accepts that interoperability is the way forward. But too many people in the NHS still see interoperability as a technical matter rather than something which allows them to do their jobs better.

“The ITK initiative must do more to persuade everyone from medical and nursing directors, to FDs and CEOs that this is a mission critical issue. Suppliers provide what trusts ask for, and interoperability will only get to the top of the agenda if it’s central to what the customer demands.”

The report also calls for closer and more productive links to be established between the DH, the NHS, Intellect and its members. For the ITK to be a success, it argues, there must be productive and collaborative engagement with suppliers.

We Should Talk: Interoperability and the NHS, was written by Paul Cooper of IMS MAXIMS and Martin Whittaker of the Touchstone Consultancy, both of whom are members of the Intellect Healthcare Council. It was published in September 2011 and can be downloaded at http://www.intellectuk.org/component/docman/doc_download/5564-we-should-talk-interoperability-and-the-nhs-sept-2011.

About IMS MAXIMS
IMS MAXIMS is the company behind the widely-used MAXIMS clinical PAS. It is a specialist in developing clinical and administrative software solutions and currently supports more than 100 organisations and 10,000 users of IMS MAXIMS products.

To find out more about IMS MAXIMS and its products visit www.imsmaxims.com, email enquiries@imsmaxims.com or call +44 1908 588800.

About the MAXIMS clinical PAS
MAXIMS gives clinicians the applications they need to provide the best possible patient care, and allows provider organisations to manage their patient administration with ease and efficiency. Rival products often tend to be administrative systems with clinical software added on. MAXIMS is equally focused on the needs of clinicians and provider organisations – which we believe is the way to guarantee the best patient outcomes with optimum efficiency.

Media Contacts
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Suppliers form partnership to support NHS reforms – ProHealthServiceZone.com

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Suppliers band together to target new NHS IT marketplace – PublicTechnology.net

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Suppliers partner to support NHS reforms – Hospital IT Europe

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Suppliers Partner to Support NHS Reforms – eHealthNews

Monday, November 21st, 2011