PATIENTS FOR PRIMARY CARE – WHY WE CANNOT DO IT ALONE Anders Olauson, EPF President Agrenska Chairman The Future of Primary Care in Europe IV, Gothenborg,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tomasz Szelagowski General Director Federation of Polish Patients The role of patients and patients' organisations in the facilitation of necessary changes.
Advertisements

Active ageing into practice! Experiences of civic engagement in health policies Alessio Terzi, Teresa Petrangolini, Giulia Savarese Cittadinanzattiva.
CPME Comité Permanent des Médecins Européens Standing Committee of European Doctors 6 th European Patients Rights Day – Active Ageing Citizens.
Innovative Practice In Using ICT Working Together To Improve The Patient Journey Dr Roy Harper Consultant Physician and Endocrinologist The Ulster Hospital.
Intelligence Step 5 - Capacity Analysis Capacity Analysis Without capacity, the most innovative and brilliant interventions will not be implemented, wont.
Supporting National e-Health Roadmaps WHO-ITU-WB joint effort WSIS C7 e-Health Facilitation Meeting 13 th May 2010 Hani Eskandar ICT Applications, ITU.
Promoting patient-centred healthcare around the world A patient perspective on the multiple policy initiatives: Lessons learnt – assessing the gaps Joanna.
“Positioning Health at the Centre of the post 2013 Cohesion Policy” Anders Olauson EPF President.
PRESENTATION Youth and Health-an overview from the European Youth Forum Laura Cottey Member of European Youth Forum Working Group on employment and social.
Scotland Telecare and Digital Health Prof George Crooks OBE.
Meaningful Patient Involvement In FP7 Research Nicola Bedlington Meaningful Patient Involvement In FP7 Research Nicola Bedlington Open Information Day.
European Partnership for Action Against Cancer (EPAAC)
Policy recommendations for wider implementation of telemedicine Peeter Ross, MD, PhD e-Health expert, Estonian eHealth Foundation, Estonia.
TRAINING FOR ANTIMICROBIAL STEWARDSHIP PROGRAMMES IN HOSPITALS JUNE 2014.
Information and Communication Technology Research Initiative Supporting the self management of obesity: The role of ICTs University.
Dorota Kilańska RN, PhD European Nursing Research Foundation (ENRF)
Value+: Meaningful Patient Involvement Diane Whitehouse Value+: Meaningful Patient Involvement Diane Whitehouse Open Information Day on FP7 Health Research.
PATIENT –CENTRED CHRONIC DISEASE MANAGEMENT AND GENDER Susanna Palkonen, EPF Board Member Health & Gender though life, Copenhagen, 15 July.
A STRONG PATIENTS’ VOICE TO DRIVE BETTER HEALTH IN EUROPE EPF Annual General Meeting 19 May 2010 EPF Annual General Meeting 19 May 2010.
UNESCO and Information Literacy Abdul Waheed Khan Assistant Director-General for Communication and Information Durban ::: 20 August 2007 E-Learning: Universities.
Introduction to Standard 2: Partnering with consumers Advice Centre Network Meeting Nicola Dunbar October 2012.
Kaisa Immonen-Charalambous Senior Policy Adviser, European Patients’ Forum EPF Conference on Patient Empowerment: Conference document Patient Empowerment.
Diana Laurillard Head, e-Learning Strategy Unit Overview of e-learning: aims and priorities.
Chronic diseases & Community – Based Care Dr. Etemad Deputy of health Head of Center for Non-Communicable Diseases.
Towards a Multi-Agency Knowledge Broker Network
New technologies, New patients, New networks MovingLife Project: Scenario workshop on future mHealth applications 27/01/2012, Brussels New technologies,
Critical Role of ICT in Parliament Fulfill legislative, oversight, and representative responsibilities Achieve the goals of transparency, openness, accessibility,
Criteria for Centres of Expertise for Rare Diseases in the EU following EUCERD Recommendations RARECARENet Project: Consensus meeting on.
The Role of Patients in EU Policy Development European Health Forum Gastein October 2003 – Bad Gastein Presented by Erick Savoye Director of the European.
Promoting patient-centred healthcare around the world Patient Engagement in Patient Safety Jolanta Bilińska Secretary and Governing Board Member IAPO President.
Summary of ICIUM Chronic Care Track Prepared by: Ricardo Perez-Cuevas Veronika Wirtz David Beran.
Current challenges for health systems Increasing elderly population –Relative decrease in resources (fewer taxpayers), chronic patients Financial sustainability.
Patient safety panel Magdalena Machalska EPF Policy Assistant.
Dr. David Mowat June 22, 2005 Federal, Provincial & Local Roles Surveillance of Risk Factors and Determinants of Chronic Diseases.
Crosswalk of Public Health Accreditation and the Public Health Code of Ethics Highlighted items relate to the Water Supply case studied discussed in the.
UKMi Strategy 2007 Replaces 2000 Strategy Launched 31/10/2007 Takes account of political, policy, organisational and operational NHS changes Takes account.
Alliance of Community Oriented Primary Care services [ACOPC] 18 March 2011 By Dr Ade Adeagbo.
Presentation 2014 Nurse Leadership Summit Developing Nurse Leaders for a Changing Healthcare Environment September 24, 2014 Nurse Alliance of SEIU Pennsylvania.
Trust as a key factor for end users’ uptake of mHealth Findings of the European project Chain of Trust Liuska Sanna, Programme Manager “mHealth – making.
Eurocarers and EU level policy Eurocarers EGA, 16 November 2010 Christine Marking Advisor to the Eurocarers Executive Committee.
Introduction to GeSCI Meeting with Ministry of Education in Bolivia 26 April 2006.
Plan © Plan An introduction. © Plan It starts with ambition… Plan’s Vision is of a world in which all children realise their full potential in societies.
Personalisation Overview 5 th July Personalisation Personalisation of social care means moving away from traditional provision where people are.
Collaboration – leads us for better result Agnese Knabe Project coordinator European Public Health Alliance Civic Alliance – Latvia 2-3 June, 2006, Legnica,
Experiences From Scotland Prof George Crooks OBE Medical Director NHS 24 Director Scottish Centre for Telehealth and Telecare.
A STRONG PATIENTS’ VOICE TO DRIVE BETTER HEALTH IN EUROPE EPF Annual General Meeting 19 May 2010 EPF Annual General Meeting 19 May 2010.
EARIP Stakeholder Workshop Models and healthcare systems: transferability of best practice across Europe Dr. Aurélien PEREZ European Commission Health.
Horizon Scanning: future skills and competences of the health workforce in Europe MATT EDWARDS and JOHN FELLOWS WP6, EU JA on Health Workforce Planning.
A STRONG PATIENTS’ VOICE TO DRIVE BETTER HEALTH IN EUROPE.
Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process
Joint Action on Addressing Chronic Diseases and Healthy Ageing Across the Life-Cycle (JA-CHRODIS) An Overview Teresa Chavarría National Institute of Health.
1st eHealth conference - Sofia01/02/2006 The Added Value of eHealth by Marc Lange.
Advancing self care in Australia AFAMELA/WSMI October 2015 Deon Schoombie Australian Self Medication Industry.
Developing a connected health economy in Northern Ireland Dr Andrew McCormick Permanent Secretary, Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety,
“Managing healthcare costs: can patient safety be traded-off?” 6 May 2015, Brussels Kaisa Immonen-Charalambous Senior Policy Adviser, European Patients’
A look into current and future trends in national policies for eHealth and Innovation in the WHO European Region Clayton Hamilton, eHealth and Innovation.
Aligning Policy Agendas The case of personalised care and cure for healthy and active ageing Setting the scene for the DG Regio and Flanders Smart Specialisation.
European Agency for Development in Special Needs Education Project updates Marcella Turner-Cmuchal.
European Patients’ Academy on Therapeutic Innovation – The project is receiving support from the.
European Innovation Partnership (EIP) on Active and Healthy Ageing Karolina Lagiewka DG SANCO, 02 Strategy and Analysis.
Knowledge for Healthcare: Driver Diagrams October 2016
Dorota Kilańska RN, PhD European Nursing Research Foundation (ENRF)
Patient Empowerment in Oncology Birgit BEGER, ECCO CEO
ICT PSP 2011, 5th call, Pilot Type B, Objective: 2.4 eLearning
Community Pharmacy: Sharing Our Vision
Kaisa Immonen EPF Director of Policy
CSI-Piemonte (Consortium for the Information System)
The Compelling Case for Integrated Community Care: Setting the Scene
EESC Public Hearing 30-Jan-2019
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Alliance
Presentation transcript:

PATIENTS FOR PRIMARY CARE – WHY WE CANNOT DO IT ALONE Anders Olauson, EPF President Agrenska Chairman The Future of Primary Care in Europe IV, Gothenborg, September

subtitle Independent, non-governmental umbrella organisation set up in 2003 VISION: High-quality, patient- centred, equitable healthcare for all patients in the EU MISSION: To provide a strong and united patients’ voice –> Putting patients at the centre of EU health policy EPF About us 54 member organisations – 150 million patients with chronic conditions across the EU

subtitle Much of the patients’ care journey, and of their quality of life, depends on the quality of primary care Essential for prevention (primary and secondary) screening, diagnosis, care coordination, information to patients… Challenges facing healthcare among which demographic trends are affecting primary care. Our current healthcare system are not generally geared towards patients’ with chronic diseases’ needs: redesigning healthcare systems to ensure high quality chronic disease management It is essential to take into account the patient perspective to ensure we truly place the patients’ need at the centre of care Future of primary care

subtitle Patient involvement in health-related decision- making is a fundamental right … & a crucial element for the future of healthcare, and to provide patient-centered care Through our project Value+ we explored patient participation in EU health research, and developed the concept of meaningful patient involvement, along with indicators and tools to implement it. Patients experience in navigating health systems can help in identifying barriers and areas for improvement, as well as good practices. Meaningful patient involvement

subtitle Currently patients report they struggle to obtain the care they need Integration of care need to be vertical (between different levels within the whole healthcare system)– and horizontal (between health and social care) Primary care has a key role to play in integrating care and empowering patient to remain independent longer with sufficient support the needs of patients, their families and carers need to be truly at the centre Coordinated intervention between different actors of primary care is also essential for prevention & adherence intervention Coordination of care

subtitle Healthcare professionals are the first source of trusted information to patients But key mismatch in communication: patients report they want more than what healthcare professional give Information to patients Patients have a fundamental right to access high quality information about a variety of topic relating to their health condition and treatment – in a format that is accessible to them, at the time when they need it – one size does not fit all Core quality criteria developed at the EU pharmaceutical forum with input from patient organisations: a model to follow

subtitle Primary healthcare plays a central role in building patients’ health literacy patients, when informed, empowered and involved, are an asset to society…. & for healthcare professionals : moving from monologue to a dialogue, with truly productive discussion better health outcomes & sustainability of healthcare EPF calls for comprehensive strategy on information to patients at EU level that encompass health literacy Health literacy the capacity to obtain, interpret and understand health information; to make sound health decisions; and to navigate the health services.

subtitle  Healthcare providers have a key role to play in providing an enabling healthcare environment for the patients. Shared decision making: Moving from adherence to concordance: a patient- clinician interaction whereby both partner are in a therapeutic alliance Key role of patient and their organisations in identifying needs in terms of skills, competences, and continuing professional development ”Patient literacy” EPF calls on the EU institutions and member states to take into account the patients perspective in debates around planning in healthcare and skill needs of the health workforce

subtitle  Patient involvement and empowerment will become necessary with innovative form of care: e.g. Personalised medicines  Importance of ICT Technologies and eHealth to support care coordination, patient empowerment and shared decision- making  EPF’s projects in this area: Innovation and primary care led by EPF in collaboration with healthcare professionals organisations- focusing on user perception and acceptance of telehealth Setting real life telemedicine pilots in 9 European regions developing and deploying a basket of services in 11 European regions providing patients’ access to Electronic Health Records

subtitle An unprecedented collaboration: Patient organisations, health professionals, health tech experts, health NGOs, pharma industry Our starting points: Patients want and need more information but are unaware of research & their role in it. Patient advocates play a key role in providing information, but may lack education and training to participate in research Benefit for patients: understanding more about, and thus contributing to the multiple facets of evidence-based new medicine. EUPATI: a breakthrough model

subtitle What we aim to achieve: EUPATI Certificate Training Programme Patient Ambassadors in committees, HTA agencies, industry, regulatory bodies, academia etc Patient Journalists raising awareness Patient Trainers for patient communities and networks. 100 patient advocates patient advocates individuals EUPATI Educational Toolbox Educational tools for patient advocates (print, slide shows, eLearning, webinars, videos) for patient advocates EUPATI Internet Library Patients & lay public at large, e.g. on specific aspects of the development process of medicines for patients with low (health) literacy.

subtitle Primary care is bound to have a pivotal role for chronic disease management Patient empowerment and meaningful involvement are critical success factors in achieving the right changes to provide high quality, sustainable healthcare to patients, and to improve their quality of life Final Thoughts Patients are not cost drivers. They are an essential part of the solution: Patients have the experience, will and ability to contribute meaningfully to all health related decision making – whether individually or collectively.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION! More information: