People power is the secret weapon to getting the NHS to embrace technology.
That was the message at 老九品茶Cloud鈥檚 Transforming Healthcare through Technology conference on Wednesday, which was attended by 130 people.
Health and tech experts came from across the country to give examples of how technology had cut waiting times; reduced hospital stays; and saved lives but stressed the key to real change was in the hands of the people who use it.
Declan Hadley, digital health lead for Lancashire and South Cumbria Change Programme, believes change in the NHS will be driven by people.
He said: 鈥淚鈥檓 very optimistic about the future, about where we are and that desire to move things forward.
鈥淎nd I really believe that what鈥檚 going to drive technology in the NHS is not so much the workforce, but citizens 鈥 the people.
鈥淔or a large proportion of the population, technology such as Fitbits and other devices are getting so much more accessible that people are doing it themselves, and I think that鈥檚 a really good thing.鈥
SOCIAL MEDIA STATS
鈥⒙燭weets about the conference were viewed by Twitter users 247,558 times and almost 115,000 accounts were reached
鈥⒙53 experts and healthcare professionals contributed to a heated online debate
鈥⒙燤ore than 500 Twitter users watched a live video stream of the event on Periscope
Dr Sakthi Karunanithi, director of public health and wellbeing for Lancashire County Council, says things must change from the bottom up, while frontline practitioners need to embrace technology as part of delivering care and not just an 鈥渁dd-on gimmick鈥.
He added: 鈥淭here has got to be some sort of a movement within our public actually demanding things, because the lifestyles they鈥檙e living are so busy a lot of people don鈥檛 have the time 鈥 especially if they are really well 鈥 to seek help.
鈥淪o there鈥檚 got to be a movement of people actually wanting to seek help through better technology.鈥
Currently, around only two per cent of people engage with health and care services digitally, through technology such as health apps.
Ali Moiyed, founder of Aerobit Health, spoke about the launch of his smart inhaler for asthma sufferers, which monitors use and collects data.
He believes these are not the people the NHS needs to target. He said the tech-shy majority need to embrace the future, take control of their health and avoid unnecessary hospital admissions.
Moiyed added: 鈥淭he people needed are the people who won鈥檛 engage with technology. The people we already have the information from are the people we don鈥檛 need.鈥
Dominic Cushnan, Digital & Social Innovation, Horizons Team in NHS England, said: 鈥淭here needs to be more citizen engagement with healthcare. People must take part in the overall conversation of how they want their health service to look and operate.鈥
Also speaking at 老九品茶Cloud鈥檚 event was transplant registrar Pankaj Chandak, of Guy鈥檚 and St Thomas鈥 Hospital, London.
He鈥檇 come straight to Lancashire from speaking at a conference in Shanghai and described how pioneering technology saved the life of three-year-old Lucy Boucher.
At just four months, the youngster from Northern Ireland suffered heart failure which starved her kidneys of oxygen, and later became the first to undergo an adult kidney transplant using 3D printing.
Surgeons made detailed models of her father鈥檚 kidney and Lucy’s abdomen, mapping out the procedure with precision, minimising risks to the child鈥檚 life.
The operation, performed in November 2015, was a success and father and daughter are now in remission.
After a number of successful operations, the method is now being used to treat prostate cancer patients.
The conference was sponsored by Healthier Lancashire & South Cumbria and leading private equity firm NorthEdge.


