Title: ICTenabled health
1gsc11_joint_33.ppt
Healthcare in the Network Economy
2Canada has become an e-Society
- 100 of schools and libraries connected by 1999
- 600,000 refurbished computers given to schools
- Student-to-computer ratio (median) is 5 to 1
(Statistics
Canada, 2004) - Established 3,900 community Internet access sites
- CAnet 4 the worlds first national optical
research and
education network - 81 of households (IPSOS-Reid 2005) 82 Firms
use the Internet (SECT 2004) - One of the highest rates of broadband penetration
(OECD 2004) - 1 in Government Online (GOL) (Accenture 2001,
2002, 2003, 2004, 2005)
Citizens, businesses and governments are going
online
3Canadians moving online and demanding high-speed
Broadband Penetration
Source Yankee Group, North America Consumer
Fixed-Line Media Forecast (March 2005)
4Seek health information
Source Canadian Internet Project, May 2005
5Why focus on the health care sector?
- 10.4 of Canadas GDP (2004)
- Estimated 142 B spending in 2005
- Close to 40 of P/T expenditures
- Employs over 1.1 million people (2004)
- Responsible for estimated 24 of business RD
(2004)
Sources CIHI, Statistics Canada
crucial economic sector
6Health spending pressures rising
- Average cost to provide health care for 1 year
- 30 year-old man 230
- 65 year-old man 2,400
- In constant 1997
- Source CBoC, (2004)
We must increase productivity in health care
Source Hogan Hogan, How Will the Ageing of
the Population Affect Health Care Needs and Costs
in the Foreseeable Future?, for Commission on
the Future of Health Care in Canada, 2002.
7Work underway to improve ICTs in health
- Canada Health Infoway is national lead
- 1.2 B to ensure 50 of Canadians have EHR by
2009. - Has committed investment in 146 projects across
Canada totaling 536 M by the end of next month
(e.g. EHR standards, diagnostic imaging,
telehealth) - www.infoway-inforoute.ca
- Provinces and territories are making progress
- Hospital Connectivity Most provinces/territories
have already connected their hospitals through
high-speed private networks - Physicians Funding for connectivity or ICTs
(ON, Quebec, Alberta) - Pharmacies Pharmacy networks and/or online
accessible prescription databases. - Other issues privacy, billing, liability, claims
etc.
8But we are not there yetHealth sector among
least ICT-intensive sectors
ICT Investment as a Percentage of Total
Investment by Industry, 2004
- And invests 35 less in ICTs than U.S. health
sector - Canada 10.5
- U.S. 15.9
health care sector
Total investment includes all fixed investments
(structures, ME, etc.), but excludes
inventories. Source A. Sharpe, Canadian Centre
for Living Standards, What explains the
Canada-US ICT gap? http//www.csls.ca/data/ict.as
p, Table S21 (2005).
9Health care facilities are under investing in ICTs
- Canadian hospitals spend only between 1.8 and
2.5 of their annual operating budgets on ICTs
(CBoC 2004) - Compared to 4 in Sweden, which has EHRs online
in every hospital and primary health care centre.
(CBoC 2004) - And 9-13 in ICT-intensive sectors (ITAC, 2003)
- Hospitals face the same transformation challenges
as other enterprises - changing business practices
- need for sector-wide and supply-chain wide
solutions - Lack of experts with combination of skills to
implement
10And physicians not integrating ICTs in workflow
- Physicians in general are early adopters of ICTs,
but have difficulty integrating into workflow and
direct patient care - 88 of Canadian physicians use the Internet, but
one out of every 2 users accesses it from home,
rather than in the office. - Compared to 80 of physicians in the EU connected
to electronic data interchange system (European
Commission 2006) - Demographics are changing use 53 of Canadian
physicians under 35 are using PDAs (compared to
less than 33 of physicians over 55). (CMA) - GP offices face the same challenges as other SMEs
in using ICTs (lack of time and expertise,
transforming business processes, need solution as
part of supply chain).
Sources Canada Health Infoway, End User
Acceptance Strategy Current State Assessment,
May 2005. Brewin, Bob, Canada outpaces U.S. in
health IT, FWC.com, February 15, 2006.
11Room for Improvements
- Canadian physicians not maximizing benefits of
ICTs - only 34 have digitized medical records in their
offices (as compared to 51 in the
U.S.) - only 10 communicate with patients via email
(as compared to 22 in New
Zealand) - only 8 use e-prescribing
(as
compared to 87 in the U.K.). - Only 14 of Canadian physicians use
electronic medical records
(2001)
(as compared to 59 in the U.K.)
Sources Canada Health Infoway, End User
Acceptance Strategy Current State Assessment,
May 2005 and Harris Interactive, 2001.
12A crowded field of SDOs
- IEEE 1073
- Medical device communication
- ISO TC 215
- Healthcare ICT system interoperability
- IEC TC 62
- Electrical medical equipment, including EMC
- CEN TC 251
- Health informatics
- ITU-T SG 16
- Generic architecture for multimedia telemedicine
apps
13And some less well-known
- Health Level 7
- Integrating the Healthcare Experience
- Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium
- Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine
- American Society for Testing and Materials
- Healthcare Info and Management Systems Society
- American Dental Association
- Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute
- And many more
14Some recent initiatives
- IEEE SA Healthcare Standards Study Group
- Gap analysis, followed by new project proposals
- Healthcare IT Standards Panel (ANSI)
- Harmonize standards for communicating data among
healthcare software applications - ETSI
15Conclusion
- Time to add Healthcare as a High Interest
Subject. - GSC should collaborate with IEEE SA Healthcare
Study Group and/or ANSI Healthcare IT Standards
Panel.