Innovation can be new approaches not just ‘shiny new devices’
- 26 June 2019
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Innovation in the NHS doesnât have to be a âshinyâ new device or product â it can also be a method or new approach, it has been said.
Speaking at the Digital Healthcare Show at Health Plus Care in London, Henry Ireland, an innovation advisor, gave the audience his four tips to drive change in the healthcare sector.
As part of a panel discussion on adopting and spreading technology across integrated care systems (ICS), Ireland, of Imperial College Health Partners, said: âInnovation doesnât have to be a shiny product of device, it can be a method or an approach.
âI say that, not because I think we donât need the shiny innovations, but I think itâs much easier to overlook the stuff that is boring.
âMy first boring tip on innovation is just giving it a go. I think we spend so much time in the NHS finding reasons not to work a little bit different, and there are plenty of good reasons for that, but we canât hope to adopt these radical innovations if we arenât willing to take really small steps in the way we work.
âMy second point on innovation is to keep giving something a go. We are all too quick to pack something in when it hasnât started to work immediately and we have to know when to stop things when they arenât working but also to give enough time for innovations or our teams to form.
âThat can be really difficult when we are getting a lot of pressure from our managers to deliver results, so if thereâs anything to take home from this itâs: please give your teams enough time to deliver the innovations theyâve promised.â
Site visits and regularly meeting with other teams are a good way to learn from each other, he said, simply by getting out and seeing how others deliver care.
âThatâs my next innovation: shadowing each other. We all think itâs a good idea but we rarely do it, so I would really encourage you to get stuck in and give that a go,â he added.
âThe fourth is just spending time together. If you work through some of these pressure points you find you can do an awful lot more in the time youâve got.
âIt really difficult to build this case to adopt boring innovation when we are up against more exciting gadgets, but my hope is when we can start to develop better evidence in this space we will be able to provide a better case for doing this type of work.â
The theme was echoed across the panel, chaired by CCIO for health and social care in England, Simon Eccles.
Manuel Bosch, chief information and innovation officer at Ribera Salud Group said transformation should be about people before itâs about technology.
âThe question is not âwhatâ or âhowâ, the question should be âwhy?â, why are we doing this to provide better care, or efficiency, or patient experiences,â he said.
âOne important thing that we have learnt is that transformation is not about computers, it is about people.
Speaking in a keynote address earlier in the day Eccles said more CCIOs, CIOs, and CNOs were needed in the NHS in order for technology to streamline clinical processes.
âWe are, this year, going to see our first HIMS Level 7 hospitals. We have comprehensive digitization of primary care, we are a world leader in that regard and through our Local Health and Care Record programme we have shown you can join care together in different localities,â he said.
âBut what we have got to do, is spread that to every part of the NHS. We need locally placed shared records so, when I look somebody up, I am not seeing a thin slice of data relating to my own organisation⊠it relates to all aspect of their care.â