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Annual Conference 2011

Annual Conference 2011. Transforming the NHS – The Role of ICT. Dave Lang - The National View.

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Annual Conference 2011

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  1. AnnualConference2011 Transforming the NHS – The Role of ICT

  2. Dave Lang - The National View ‘The NHS needs innovative IM&T systems, solutions & service models to underpin new care models, improved outcomes for patients and deliver greater value for money. If it doesn’t need to be done nationally, let’s not do it. Local ICT services will be shaped through policy, incentives & levers to ensure that they deliver maximum value, increased service levels and reduced risk’

  3. The Intelligent Commissioner ‘Patient level information, ideally real time, available to GP’s and Commissioners, right across the care continuum, supporting effective clinical and financial decision making. We need commissioning support with is fit for purpose that will support CCG’s to deliver the new critical model of commissioning. This can be delivered in whatever way CCG’s choose but needs to deliver improved VFM and innovation’

  4. Group Feedback – Key Messages ‘Don’t destabilise patient care systems’ ‘Start thinking about patient health care systems, not sector specific systems. Commission for health & wellbeing, not activity’ ‘Mindsets needs to change’ ‘There’s a long way to go before we can say we have joined up thinking, supported by valuable, usable business intelligence’

  5. Bill McCarthy – Commissioning Board MD ‘We have made dramatic improvements across the NHS over the last decade. Spending has been at the heart of that, but it is a broken model. The economic & structural changes are here to stay. Unless we think radically, all those gains will be lost. Information is key: supporting holistic care packages, driving integrated services, focussing on quality outcomes, creating patient centered information and helping clinical leaders take effective clinical, operational & financial decisions. This is challenging and exciting. Don’t sit back and wait for the answers’

  6. Dr Mary Hawking – The GP ‘Whole-System, multi-faceted, coherent care is the cornerstone of improving health, wellbeing, outcomes and patients experience. But making it work is incredibly difficult. Information is essential. Technology has a key role to play but won’t be successful unless it is user friendly, accessible where needed, not constrained by organisational and professional boundaries . Intelligent, holistic commissioning is critical’

  7. Andrew Fearn - The IT Professional ‘Transformation is about perspective. We often try to shoehorn processes around technology, but strapping new technology onto old processes doesn’t work. The biggest change is gained from listening to the ideas that clinical teams have and creatively deploying technology to support them. This is about technology helping us to care for people. Much of it is basic, simple stuff, not cutting edge high risk projects. Get out and do it’

  8. Barry Jackson – The IG Expert ‘Data-Protection law should be applied pragmatically. We need to take due care in everything we do and of course effective risk management is vital, but IG rules should not stand in the way of technological advances or transformational change. Embed IG thinking into the design stage of changes and apply reasonableness and proportionality. All that said, don’t be afraid to say ‘we shouldn’t do that’ if it clearly inappropriate’

  9. Chris Long - The Cluster CEO ‘The scale & pace of the challenge is unprecedented & is here to stay. All the signs of failure are there in both Providers & Commissions. There is no financial magic wand. Hospitals will be smaller, and community services, whether NHS or Social Care, needs to be reinvented to enable that to happen safely. ICT services are not immune from that. Nothing is sacrosanct. Vision and leadership are crucial if we are to maintain control, protect patients and create a sustainable future’

  10. Dr Tony Shannon – The ED Consultant ‘Information is at the heart of everything we do. People, processes & technology all need to work coherently. We have to get the standards right, bring them together across & beyond the NHS and make them work. Making it real for the clinical community is vital. Clinical portals, oriented around the patient, are a viable and clinically credible way of achieving those aims. Using open source removes the dependency on one technology or one vendor, enables collaboration and has the potential to deliver much greater value for money’

  11. Sir Chris O’Donnell – The Strategist ‘Strategic thinking and an unambiguous vision are at the core of successful transformation. Maintaining a focus on excellence, improving competitiveness and understanding the emerging needs of your stakeholders is critical. You have to design a future that people can understand, want to be part of and are drawn to, whether they be your own staff, delivery partners, the local community or consumers and is not constrained by localism or current thinking’

  12. Dr Bob Bury - The Consultant Radiologist ‘IT is critical to effective clinical practice, but we take it for granted and forget how things were done before today’s technology became ubiquitous. Technology is good, but don’t overcomplicate it. It is the little things that make a difference, not massive complex systems. Understand what clinical users need, work with us, take us forwards not backwards and give us local solutions solving local challenges which maximise the benefits from local networks and which make us more effective’

  13. AnnualConference2010 Transforming the NHS – The Role of ICT

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