Title: eHealth in Europe: Rules and Regulations
1eHealth in Europe Rules and Regulations
F. Lievens1,2, M. Jordanova3,4 1Board Member,
Secretary and Treasurer of ISfTeH,
Switzerland 2Director, Med-e-Tel, Belgium,
lievens_at_skynet.be 3Space Technology
Research Institute, BAS, Bulgaria 4Education
Program Coordinator, Med-e-Tel, mjordan_at_bas.bg
2Europe EU
- Europe
- 10 180 000 km2 - the 6th largest continent
- 742 452 000 people
- gt220 languages and 5 time zones
- 50 internationally recognised sovereign states (
4 dependencies 5 with limited recognition) - gt500 regions with different culture, economic
development, needs, expectations, traditions - European Union
- 4 324 782 km2
- 508 191 116 citizens
- 24 official languages
- 28 Countries
3Main European Healthcare Issues
- Growing demand of medical specialists due to
- Increasing and ageing population
- Movement of people (including immigration)
- Unprecedented speed of distribution of pathogens
- Rising health costs
- gt70 of healthcare costs are spent on chronic
diseases - gt100 million citizens, above the age of 15, have
a chronic disease - Forecast The costs of health social care will
rise substantially to about 9 of EU GDP in 2050
4The Solution is eHealth
5EU eHealth Rules and Regulations
- Challenges
- Address health issues
- Answer needs expectations
- Respect local legislation, traditions, cultural
economic differences
- Goals
- Increase healthcare quality, access and safety by
making eHealth part of health policy and by
coordinating EU countries' political, financial
and technical strategies - Improve citizens' health by making life-saving
information available between countries using
eHealth tools - Ensure sustainability of health systems
6EU Policy Supporting Actions
- The eHealth Action Plan endorsed by the European
Council in 2004 - The first formal commitment expressed by all
Member States to cooperate closely in the area of
eHealth - Europe 2020 Strategy / eHealth Action Plan
2012-2020 - Goal Moving EU towards a European eHealth Area
by coordinating actions and promoting synergies
between related policies and stakeholders, so as
to develop better solutions, prevent market
fragmentation and disseminate best practices - Specific objectives
- To create an electronic health record
architecture - To set up health information networks between
points of care to coordinate reactions to health
threats - To ensure online health services such as
information on healthy living and illness
prevention and - To develop teleconsultation, ePrescribing,
eReferral and eReimbursement capabilities
7eHealth in the EU Legal Context
- Wide range of legal issues are relevant to
eHealth, ranging across contract law, employment
and market laws, and even criminal law, etc. - But 3 areas of legislation are essential for
eHealth flourishing - Data Protection, Confidentiality and Security
(Directive 95/46/EC on Data Protection) - Product and Services Liability , i.e. to what
extent rules on liability for goods and services
cover the provision of healthcare using eHealth
tools (Directive 97/7/EC on Distance Contracting) - Trade and Competition Law, i. e. buying, selling
and using eHealth Tools and Services (Articles 81
and 82 of the Treaty on the European Communities)
Adapted from Legally eHealth - Putting eHealth in
its European Legal Context, DOI 10.2759/18427,
EC, 2008
8Implementing EU Policy
- Research and development
- Research Projects (since 1988) gt 450 projects, gt
1 billion - Cooperation with health services, industry,
universities - Horizon 2020 - financing research innovation
- Policy instruments
- Communications, Recommendations, Directives
- Stakeholders Group (users, industry)
- Strategy studies, road maps
- Support to deployment (since 2007)
- Market validation and implementation
- Competitiveness and Innovation
- Connecting Europe Facility (interconnected
transport, energy and digital networks ) to
support implementation of large scale
cross-border eHealth services and connecting
infrastructures - Work with national health systems (since 2011)
- Collaboration of MS in the eHealth Network
- Deployment of the results of projects
Adapted from T. Piha, Med-e-Tel 2014
9eHealth in The European Legal Context
- eHealth Action Plan 2012-2020
- Article 14 of Directive 2011/24/EU on patients'
rights in cross-border care - Strategy for the Digital Single Market adopted by
the EC on 6 May 2015 - Green Paper on mHealth
- Implementing act on prescriptions - Article 11
paving way to guidelines on cross-border
ePrescription - eHealth Network
- Governs the cooperation improvement of EU Member
States - Gives direction on main eHealth developments
under the eHealth Action Plan
Adapted from T. Piha, Med-e-Tel 2014
10Coordinating EU Standards
The European Code of Practice for Telehealth
Services provides a much needed quality benchmark
that builds trust among service users and carers
and helps with service reforms
11The Leader in eHealth Legislation
WHO Legal Frameworks for eHealth, 2013,
http//www.who.int/goe/publications/ehealth_series
_vol5/en/
12The Leader in eHealth Legislation
WHO Legal Frameworks for eHealth, 2013,
http//www.who.int/goe/publications/ehealth_series
_vol5/en/
13More Info about EU eHealth Policy
EC Public Health eHealth Policy site
http//ec.europa.eu/health/ehealth/policy/index_en
.htm DG Health Consumers site
http//http//ec.europa.eu/dgs/health_food-safety
DG Connects sitehttp//ec.europa.eu/digital
-agenda/en/eu-policy-ehealth WHO Legal
Frameworks for eHealth http//www.who.int/goe/publ
ications/ehealth_series_vol5/en/
14Summary
- Europe, and especially the EU, has done a lot
towards wide development and implementation of
eHealth - EU may serve as an example of how eHealth
regulations are build respecting the interests of
different countries and implemented at
international level - Yet, Europe does not have a monopoly on how
eHealth has to be regulated. Europe is always
ready to coordinate actions, share expertise,
exchange knowledge and learn from the rest of the
world because eHealth is truly GLOBAL - The CHALLENGE for most countries is how to expand
the health services to meet growing needs with
limited resources, i.e. to achieve UNIVERSAL
HEALTH COVERAGE (UHC). This requires a strong,
efficient, well-run health system access to
essential medicines and technologies and
sufficient, motivated health workers
15With almost 20000 known diseases, most of them
spread worldwide, there is no single national
healthcare system that is able to dedicate human
or financial resources to deal with all of them.
In the globalized world it is time to learn from
others!
International cooperation and coordination is the
only way forward. It is time to combine the best
practices from different countries and cultures
from all over the world
16The way forward is collaboration and cooperation
in order to make the benefits of science,
information and technology, available to all. A
major international forum helps bringing experts
and stakeholders together
www.isfteh.org
17Mission Statement
The ISfTeH exists to facilitate the international
dissemination of knowledge and experience in
Telemedicine and eHealth and to provide access to
recognized experts in the field worldwide
Worldwide Membership (89 countries as per
September 2015)
18Communication Tools
- Website www.isfteh.org
- ISfTeH Newsletter (quarterly)
- Member Announcements
- ISfTeH e-Journal
19Annual Events
20th ISfTeH International Conference 28-30
October, 2015 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- 14th edition of Med-e-Tel The International
Educational and Networking Forum for eHealth,
Telemedicine and Health ICT - 6-8 April, 2016 Luxembourg, G.D. of Luxembourg
20(No Transcript)
21A wise man learns by the mistakes of others, a
fool by his own. Latin
proverb
22Thank You!