Title: Cultural Change in Professional Practice The Information Revolution
1Cultural Change in Professional Practice The
Information Revolution
Good Morning Welcome
- Central Hall Westminster, London,17 June 2008
2Welcome and introduction
- Barbara Stuttle CBE and Susan Osborne CBE
- Joint National Clinical Lead for Nurses, NHS
Connecting for Health
3Keep in mind
4The Big Picture
4
5Despite Efforts to Date, the Chronic Care
Challenge is Growing
- Over the next 10 years, the global incidence of
chronic disease is predicted to increase by 17,
further fueling the global burden of disease.
Several factors account for this driving force - The success of modern healthcare in transforming
formerly lethal diseases, injuries, and
conditions (e.g., HIV, spinal cord injuries,
diabetes, tuberculosis, and multiple sclerosis)
into chronic conditions that require continuous
treatment - Reductions in premature mortality and increasing
longevity resulting in longer-lived chronic
conditions and health-related dependencies and - Increases in the behaviors (e.g., unhealthy diet,
physical inactivity, and tobacco use) that
significantly contribute to many prevalent
chronic diseases. - Cultural and expectation changes
6Chronic disease is gaining increasing global
attention....
7Paper is no longer fit for purpose
8NHS Connecting for Health is delivering the
National Programme for Information Technology
9(No Transcript)
1020. The recording of the National Health Service
number should become a routine practice
11 In 1965 we said the interim before effective
standardisation should be kept as short as
possible 43 years later.........?
12It is unethical to carry on doing what we are
currently doing
Professor Sir Muir Gray 01-Oct-2004
13- Lets consider drivers in other industries
- Thanks to
- John C. Knight
- Department of Computer Science
- University of Virginia