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Professor Orla Hardiman HRB Clinician Scientist Innovation Its role in Delivering Better Health Outcomes
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THE PROBLEM
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Health Expenditure is Escalating
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Anderson G F, Frogner B K Health Aff 2008;27:1718-1727
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Use of hospitals
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Population health triangle 5% 15% 80% Undiagnosed disease Healthy population with risk factors Disease Severity
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We all the usual methods but it still wont work! We tried everything, but it still wont work! IRISH
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INNOVATE! Latin: Innovare To renew or change
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INNOVATION: Individual Barriers
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INNOVATION: Institutional Barriers
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INNOVATION IN THE HEALTHCARE WORLD
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RATIONING HEALTHCARE BUDGET WHO? HOW? WHAT?
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STAKEHOLDERS Society at large Healthcare professionals Industry Users (citizen/ patients)
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SOCIETY
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SOCIETAL INNOVATIONS IMPROVE KNOWLEDGE BASE Eliminate ineffective / inappropriate services –(How to define these?) Cut the volume of least cost-effective services –(How to define?)
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Rationalize Services
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Societal Innovations Strengthen Governance & Accountability
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SOCIETAL INNOVATION (NEW TREATMENTS) Strengthened HTA but limited use in cuts –Evaluate the metric –Act on HTA recommendations European Network for HTA
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INDUSTRY
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INDUSTRY INNOVATION Drug Development –Reassess models Partnerships & Collective innovations
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Disease State Gene locus / Environmental Cell Biology Animal Model Medicinal Chemistry In vitro therapeutic TARGETTED DRUG DEVELOPMENT Human trials In vivo therapeutic X
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Failures in Translation “ Valley of Death”
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PARTNERSHIPS Clinical Databases & “Deep phenotyping” Academic collaborations
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INDUSTRY INNOVATION Personalized Medicine
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Industry Innovation has Societal Implications
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Challenges for Industry Pharma’s contract with society is a mainstream issue Industry survives because it is seen as socially useful. If that perception falters, so does the business model
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MEDICAL PROFESSION
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Innovation: Medical Profession Value of Preventative Medicine Power sharing Teamwork
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Clinical Governance Recognise link between diagnostics, care and cost Clinical autonomy balanced with accountability Continuous quality improvement
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Deming
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EXAMPLE: EPILEPSY PROGRAMME Summary National Epilepsy Programme 36
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THE PATIENT
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The Citizen Patient Patient is an integral member of the team Patient as citizen has both rights & responsibilities Societal implications for how to ration
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Innovation: The Patient as “Superconsumer” Autonomy –Knowledge about individual health status –Informed choices Ability to question / adjust /accept /reject treatments
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IMPLEMENTATION
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Challenges
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Deming Cycle
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