Tuesday, 4 October 2016

Can a digital revolution save the NHS?

Can a digital revolution save the NHS? Embracing advances in technology could be the answer to the health service’s financial crisis but things won’t magically change overnight

As the NHS sinks ever deeper into financial crisis, and the search for efficiencies intensifies, it is unsurprising that the idea of harnessing the digital revolution to the way healthcare is delivered is gathering policy steam. Notwithstanding the spectacular top-down failure of the NHS National Programme for IT and the disappointing results of the national Whole System Demonstrator programme, it is entirely reasonable to revisit the ways in which advances in technology might offer smart solutions.

Currently the policy landscape is littered with strategies, reports and evolving structures. The health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, says the NHS must “go paperless” – by 2020 according to the Five Year Forward View; a national information board has been set up to deliver on this commitment; the air is thick with centrally-driven frameworks like the digital maturity index and local digital roadmaps; and a new digital delivery board has been set up by NHS England. Meanwhile, the influential Wachter Review along with weighty reports from the Nuffield Trust and the King’s Fund are all ratcheting up the pressure for change. Continue reading... The Guardian

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