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The power of information: Putting all of us in control of the health and care information we need Giles Wilmore, Director of Patient & Public Voice and.

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Presentation on theme: "The power of information: Putting all of us in control of the health and care information we need Giles Wilmore, Director of Patient & Public Voice and."— Presentation transcript:

1 The power of information: Putting all of us in control of the health and care information we need Giles Wilmore, Director of Patient & Public Voice and Information, NHS Commissioning Board Authority EMIS National User Group Conference - 6 September 2012

2 2 the vision: people first Joined up systems and shared data standards will facilitate and drive integration within and between organisations and care settings to ensure that care is focused around the person and their health and care needs. This is why the strategy spans the NHS, public health and social care. Getting the right information to the right people at the right time – in a form they can understand, engage with and contribute to – will help individuals take control of their own care, improving self-management, shared decision making, and more informed choices. Needs support and advocacy to help people in all sectors of society to make meaningful use of it, harnessing modern technology where that is helpful.

3 3 Better care the vision: care records are a core source of data

4 the vision: modern convenient information 1. Accessing your GP record online will give you more control over your care 2. Booking appointments will be quicker when you can do it online 3. You’ll need fewer phone calls when you can communicate with professional teams electronically 4. You’ll have less paperwork in your life when your healthcare letters are available online 5. You’ll know where to go for health and care information when there is one trusted website 6. Services will do more to offer you support to use and understand information if and when you need it. 7. You won’t have to repeat yourself as much when your information is shared between health and care professionals 8. You’ll be confident that your feedback is being listened to and helping to improve services 9. You will have more information to help you choose the best services and treatments for you

5 online version includes sections on “what the strategy means for me” using a wide range of case studies Easy-read developed in partnership with CHANGE, a learning disability organisation equality impact assessment co- produced by the Department of Health with 13 other organisations extensive partnership working with Intellect, Royal College of GPs and many others www.informationstrategy.dh.gov.uk strategy available online: aimed at real people

6 What ‘Information about me and my care’ means for me: As a patient or service user: I look forward to being able to book appointments and order repeat prescriptions online, communicate electronically with my health and care professionals and use IT and online services to improve my health and better care for myself, where appropriate. I look forward to being able, by 2015, to access my general practice record, including my test results, online, as well as some of my other health and care records as more care providers make these available to me. It will be important that I can share my information with others who care for me, both professionally and informally. I will know how the information from my health and care records, together with information about my own needs and preferences, will be shared securely between the professionals providing my care, so that my care can be more joined up, safer and better, and so that I won’t need to repeat important information to different staff. 6

7 What ‘Information about me and my care’ means for me: As a health and care professional: Greater and better use of IT will help me improve the efficiency and quality of my practice of care, and I will be able to prioritise more of my time for those who need face-to-face care. I recognise that it is my duty to ensure people can access their records online if they wish and have the support they need to understand information in their records. As a commissioner of care services: I will ensure all patients and service users have the opportunity and support to benefit from online access to their own health and care records, and from a growing range of other beneficial online services. I will outline a clear and agreed timetable for providers to deliver this. As a service provider: My organisation will outline a plan and timetable for all of our patients and service users to have online access to their care records and to other beneficial services. Also, we will provide appropriate support to enable everyone to understand and take proper advantage of all these services. 7

8 Information about me and my care: professional leadership In line with the recommendations of the NHS Future Forum, the Government has engaged with the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP), to work in partnership with patient groups and other professional organisations to lead development of a plan to support people to access services and their records electronically. The NHS Commissioning Board will be asked to work with the RCGP and other partners to promote this work from 2013 onwards. 8

9 International Examples of Patient Online Access to Records and Services

10 10 Discussion perspectives... comment... questions... suggestions...... please


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