Transcript Slide 1

Clinical Engagement and
Telemedicine
Church View Surgery
Andrew Innes
Why clinical engagement?
• Makes sense
• Viewed as self-evident in current UK health policy (1)
• “ Improvement of the performance of healthcare depends
first and foremost on making a difference to the experience
of patients and service users, which in turn hinges on
changing the day to day decisions of doctors, nurses and
other staff”.(2)
(1)
High Quality Care for All: NHS Next Stage Review final report. London: Stationery
Office, 2008.
(2) Ham C. Improving the performance of health services: the role of clinical leadership.
The Lancet 2003;361:1978–80.
General barriers to clinical engagement
• Lack of time
• Pressure of competing demands
• Lack of understanding
• Lack of expertise
• Disinterest
• Frank prejudice
A question of culture
Clinical culture and the role of clinical trials
Cum Scientia Caritas
• First the science
• Then the caring
• Medical training
Science
• Epistemological schism
• Mixed quality (better in heart failure than COPD)
• Problems of considering cost effectiveness
Caritas
• Antithesis of personalized healthcare?
• Remote
• Cost-cutting?
• Concerns about clinical governance and safety
Overcoming barriers to telehealth – What excites
clinicians?
• Improved quality of care – an additional window on a
patient’s problems
• Improved clinical relationship with patients
• Improved efficiency
• Improved cost effectiveness
• A different way of working
• Application of technology
Overcoming barriers to telehealth – What excites
patients?
• Empowerment – the expert patient
• Effective, timely and safer care
• Improved access
Why must clinicians change?
• Tsunami of long term conditions
• LTC affect 31% of the population and account for 52% of all
GP appointments and 65% of all OPD
• Around a 25% in the numbers of patients with LTCs over
next 25 years
• Changing practice with risk tools and community MDT
Key components of resolving clinical engagement
• Adopt a communication strategy that addresses the
problems and the benefits in terms that clinicians
understand
• Good clinical evidence of benefit
• Prioritise clinical domains rather than management targets
• Local “Champions”
• Funding – pump prime through enhanced service or QOF
mechanisms. NB. Little evidence to support much of what
QOF does and yet GP’s perform well in this framework
Thank you
• Any questions?
• [email protected]