This
appeared last week:
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Updated Feb 21 2018 at 7:00 PM
Data and technology to transform the medical system
This
content is produced by The
Australian Financial Review in
commercial partnership with the Commonwealth Bank of
Australia.
"We
collect one billion times more data on our cars than our bodies,"
Murray Brozinsky recently stated at the Commonwealth Bank's Future of
Health Conference.
A
recognised digital health leader, and chief strategy officer at
Conversa, Brozinsky advises some of the world's leading
healthcare organisations on the changing nature of health.
Comparing
cars with humans might seem a bit of a stretch but his point is we're
able to get so much diagnostic information from our car every time we
get it serviced yet most of us still know very little about how our
bodies are performing.In his presentation, Brozinsky outlined how
healthcare was evolving with augmented reality technologies and
artificial intelligence and illustrated a not-too-distant future
where passive invisible sensors will be able to track everything
biologically relevant on the body.
"They
will feed into our electronic health records and all that information
will go to create rich artificial intelligence-driven conversations
between care teams and patients. We will be able to move from
descriptive to predictive to preventative care very quickly. Patients
will be providing valuable patient-generated health data (PGHD) and
will be virtually involved in the consult," Brozinsky said.
"We
will see a major transformation in the doctor-patient relationship
from today's episodic, visit-centric and inconvenient healthcare to a
future of continuous, virtual conversations that leverage PGHD to
deliver better care at lower cost. Using data to move from treating
the 'average' patient to treating the 'individual' person
will also dramatically change the patient experience to one that is
personalised and empathetic."
Power to the patients
Importantly,
more personalised
healthcare stands to have a huge impact on government health budgets.
For example, McKinsey estimated the value of improved health of
chronic disease patients through remote monitoring could be as much
as $US1.1 trillion ($1.4 trillion) annually worldwide by 2025.
In
another presentation, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA)
executive manager emerging technology, Chris Connor, said technology
was just the tip of the healthcare solution. He said what we're
finally realising is it's a great enabler, generating value by
"putting the patient at the centre of everything we do".
Connor
indicated blockchain technologies would have a huge role to play in
the health sector, especially around the issues of "trust,
information and privacy".
He
said CBA was a great believer in a self-sovereignty model where
"we give the identity back to the customer and get them to
decide who they share with and under what conditions they share".
Managing
director and the former head of the digital health division at
Israel's Clatit Health Services, the largest health maintenance
organisation in Israel with more than 4.2 million members, Yossi
Bahagon, said we were entering the era of personalised care and what
made digital health a game changer was it's human centred.
Digital diagnosis
Bahagon
said we had to remember "digital health is not about technology,
there are people behind it".
At a
time when Australia is still wrestling with implementing a nationwide
e-health strategy, Bahagon who was an architect of Israel's e-health
system spoke of how it had been successfully implemented there with
no cyber-security breaches, as yet.
"We've
built one system that takes all your personal information and turns
it into preventative personalised recommendations. It's a
participatory health platform - a tool for saving lives," he
said.
He
said it had greatly improved the quality of care in Israel,
especially around preventative care, and obviously reduced the
cost burden.
An
example is when people have to renew a prescription. All they have to
do is logon to the system which is biometrically enabled to a sealed
database where the doctor can send the prescription to your
smartphone, which you take to a pharmacist for fulfilment.
Healthcare revolution
As
for the sensitivity around privacy issues, Bahagon said Israel
created rules for all situations "where privacy is more
important than accessibility to data".
General
manager of partnerships and strategy at Healthscope, Bennie Ng, who
was participating on a panel discussing health technology, was
confident on the power of data, suggesting patients should be able to
use data to discover individual outcomes at the surgical level, for
example.
"I
think funders will insist that all practitioners and surgeons measure
their outcomes," he said. "We're already heading down
that path and what it will do is change the focus of the conversation
to the consumer."
Dr
Louise Schaper, the chief executive officer of the Health Informatics
Society of Australia, agreed data and technology were revolutionising
healthcare.
"Every
single healthcare institution is going to have to rewrite their
business plan," she said.
"The
internet of things will ensure over the next five years, the
majority of clinically valuable data will not be captured in the
facilities health professionals run but in what we do every day. How
do we build business models around that? We're on the cusp of
significant change."
Vastly
more here:
I
hate to break the news but the same headlines and the same commentary
has been around since the turn of the century. Sure we have seen
small incremental improvements over that period but words like
revolutionise and transform are as exaggerated now as they were a
very long time ago!
Why is it when you put apparently intelligent people together in a room they get all carried away and detach themselves from the need for the hard work that is necessary?
David.
David.
ReplyDeleteIMHO, the problem lies not with "apparently intelligent people.
If you look at things like the English Industrial Revolution, (which changed artisan/craft industries), the development of the automobile (which replaced horses), the development of the mainframe computer (which changed the way many businesses and government worked) the development of the microprocessor/personal computer (which replaced mainframes and changed mush of the rest of business and government), the internet (which stuffed up old retail models, media businesses etc), the development of the smartphone (which has changed society at all levels), all major changes came from outside the industries they replaced.
Where Digital Health, which includes ADHA, is failing is that they are asking the people who know what happens today (that includes medics as well as technologist working in health) what the future should be. They may be intelligent, but they are not skilled in the disciplines and possibilities of the future.
The future of health care will not come from inside current health care. Automating existing practices gives the impression of progress, but in many cases will just make things worse.
Further, many, if not most, people working in health care will not recognise the future, not because of a lack of intelligence, but because they are not equipped to understand radically different ways of doing what they do now. In fact, in many cases, what they are doing now will not be done in the future.
And in case you were wondering I’m not talking AI, Machine Learning, robots or health records.
It is a good pitch to the audience. Bankers can understand the money involved and the return on financing. Semi automous cars etc.. not sure comparing humans to cars is a good one, the human brain monitors the body in a way that far out performs computers, unless the intention is to hook everyone into some sort on matrix the comparison is mute.
ReplyDeleteThat aside nothing in these articles says MyHR is the answer anymore than a 1965 Holden Ute would add any value to the car industries data needs.
They would do well to avoid the buzzwords and horizon scanning and be themselves, I am sure that would provide far richer dialogue.