NHS planning major telehealth rollout

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The NHS is planning to institute so-called telehealth systems in homes around the country.

Richard Granger, NHS director general of IT, said on Wednesday that this extension of health technology into the home — probably based at first on proprietary systems — would "free things up in terms of time and place" within the NHS.

Speaking to industry figures at a symposium on IT and healthcare in London, Granger also confirmed that "things going into people's homes is new scope", requiring additional budgeting beyond the original remit of the NHS's National Programme for IT.

The National Programme for IT is already expected to cost tens of billions of pounds, although precise estimates vary.

Testing the telehealth systems for interoperability with the new national database of patient care records, called the "Spine", would also be expensive, Granger added.

The telehealth devices would probably be targeted at elderly and infirm people. It's not clear, though, exactly what the systems would consist of, although it's likely they would include sensors and possibly cameras. Patients might be able to take their own blood pressure and upload the results to the NHS systems, for example.

Granger said that the existing security levels in place in hospitals today are on a par with those of the best banks, leading to some uncertainty over the security levels that will be supported by telehealth systems.

"Are we going to do that with hundreds of thousands of unpaid carers and voluntary workers who work in people's homes? Maybe, maybe not," Granger told the symposium.

Granger also suggested that the NHS was working with Microsoft to develop standards and user interfaces for telehealth systems.

Talkback

certainly not Earth

malcolmsargeant 24 January, 2007 20:33
Reply

If true, this is worrying; given the co-ordinated international work already done and underway in this area:

http://www.continuaalliance.org/home/
http://www.ictsb.org/ehealth_standardization.htm
http://tinyurl.com/2k3nze
http://www.hl7.org/Special/committees/healthcaredevices/index.cfm

"Testing the telehealth systems for interoperability with the new national database of patient care records, called the "Spine", would also be expensive, Granger added."

... and if this is really the statement then this too is enough to make one despair, when the above work is deliberately designed to join up with the patient care records favoured by the programme.

"What planet" indeed.

MelvinReynolds 25 January, 2007 15:18
Reply

The primary role of the NHS is to provide health care to a population that pays for the service. It is not cheap and from all the reports the people whom the NHS is supposed to serve are not getting a good deal. Billions of pounds being spent yet hospitals are reducing beds, closing wards, laying off nurses, reducing bulbs in hospitals. Patient lists are manipulated to try and show a good story yet Trusts are running out of money or have done so. Any investment needs to be on providing relief and care and leave any extension into the home for another 25 years. By that time maybe we will all have gone to private hospitals so it will be cheaper for the NHS. But then when has anything at the NHS delivered a cost reduction and an improved service. Grow up Mr Granger - grand ideas always fail.

1000073878 14 February, 2007 16:34
Reply

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