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Whole System Demonstrator programme Stephen Johnson Deputy Director – Head of Long Term Conditions

Whole System Demonstrator programme Stephen Johnson Deputy Director – Head of Long Term Conditions. Technologies for what purpose?. The second half of the 20 th century saw major improvements in communicable disease treatments and surgical advances

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Whole System Demonstrator programme Stephen Johnson Deputy Director – Head of Long Term Conditions

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  1. Whole System DemonstratorprogrammeStephen JohnsonDeputy Director – Head of Long Term Conditions

  2. Technologies for what purpose? • The second half of the 20th century saw major improvements in communicable disease treatments and surgical advances • The first half of the 21st century will see increases in non-communicable diseases and improvements in care of people with long term conditions • Technology is readily used and accepted in the treatment of many acute interventions – CT, MRI, x-rays, etc • But can technology be used to improve the care of people with long term conditions?

  3. ………….Yes, at least that is the claim, but where is the evidence? Back in 2006 it was recognised the evidence base was not as robust as we would have liked So we secured funding and set out to fill that gap WSD was born (3 sites, 6000 people, 238 GP practices, making it the largest RCT of TH/TC in the world) 2007 to 2008 sites were selected 2008 – 2009 patients recruited (easy this RCT thing isn’t it!!) 2009 to 2010 patient data collected Jan 2011, data to evaluation team Now? – well now the data is being evaluated and peer reviewed prior to publication

  4. What will WSD tell us?

  5. What have we learnt? • Technology is only part of the story, you must re-design services to maximize the benefit of the technology • That includes looking again at skill mix and facilities • Clinical engagement is essential, but takes time • Patients are suspicious, and building trust takes time • Patient data was not as good as we thought, disease registers were out of date of inaccurate • Some population groups were very difficult to reach • Good project/programme management is essential • What you do on a small scale does not necessarily scale But…………………………..

  6. If you get it right, and focus on the whole system Work across traditional organisational boundaries Build clinical advocacy Re-design care pathways Share Information Re-train staff Develop interoperable systems Educate patients and the public The rewards are significant…………………..

  7. the key to success is service change not just introduce the “kit” and hope for the best! BUT

  8. Remember why we are doing this The number of people with long term conditions is growing (15.4m now, but up to 18m within 20years) and they account for 70% of spend People with LTCs live with their condition every minute of every day, not just the 3 to 6 hours they are with a professional 8760 hours in a year, that leaves a lot of time Telehealth and telecare should help more people to lead a better quality of life, be more independent and spend fewer days in hospital

  9. What next? This will need significant leadership at all levels as well as raising awareness of what can be achieved and how to use the technology properly But to lead needs a direction - align incentives, re-train staff, develop interoperability, embed common standards and reduce high unit costs Government has already committed to support an industry led Code of Practice and invest in DALLAS Yet more could be achieved by encouraging “patient pull” (showing that there is an alternative to using traditional buildings), using the media to give sustained information and ensuring NHS is supported to change

  10. Stephen Johnson Deputy Director Head of Long Term Conditions 0113 254 7362 stephen.johnson@dh.gsi.gov.uk

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