On Thursday 28 June, Manchester will play host to the fourth annual
LinkGov Health & Care Conference. This will see a whole host of
Health and Care Senior Leaders, Board Directors, and many more
healthcare professionals and volunteers from all across the country,
meeting to discuss how best to move forward and constantly improve
healthcare for patients, against regulations and strict financial
restraints laid out by a coalition government who are seemingly always
looking to cut expenditure on things such as health and education in an
attempt to reduce the countries massive debt.
The conference will begin at 10am, finishing with a 4pm discussion
from keynote speaker Jim Easton, the Director of Improvement and
Transformation, who’s topics of debate will include ‘Strengthening links
between better use of information and greater efficiency and
improvements in care’ and also ‘Supporting patient choice and helping
people make decisions about their care’.
Easton’s speech will probably touch upon the Electronic Prescription Service
(EPS), and how better to efficiently manage this. This service enables
prescribers to electronically send a patients prescription to a
nominated pharmacy of the patients choice. There are obviously major
benefits to this revolutionary and efficient process, such as the
patient not having to worry about misplacing the paper prescription,
pharmacies such as Medical Specialists Pharmacy
can take care of your repeat prescriptions and monitor when they are
due – saving you the trip to your GP practice each time you need to
collect your repeat prescription. As of 18 June, there are 181 general
practices and 4,928 pharmacy sites are now ready to start using EPS
Release 2, including Medical Specialists Pharmacy, who are listed on the
NHS choices
page, so clearly the service has become huge and in the future it will
probably be responsible for how the majority of medications are
dispensed to patients.
As we reported last month,
the government are currently planning some of the most radical health
reforms ever seen and everybody will soon be able to even browse around
online to compare doctors and the success rates of particular operations
in their local hospitals. The 2012 LinkGov Health & Care Conference
will aim to study how these changes effect patients, what kind of
financial restrictions will be present, and how future strategies and
technologies can provide more safer, cost-effective and efficient
service for patient’s needs.
A main part of the afternoon in Manchester will be the meetings will
be focused on ‘The QIPP Challenge’ (Quality, Innovation, Productivity
and Prevention), and the awards given out for them. The QIPP is a
national Department of Health strategy that involves all NHS staff,
patients, clinicians and the voluntary sector. The strategies main aim
is to make a £20bn efficiency saving by 2014/15 which will all be
reinvested back into the NHS. The awards aim to recognise the efforts of
health and social care staff and those who have helped to innovate or
improve working practices, reduce costs, improve patient care, and many
other things. Some of the recipients of a QIPP Challenge Award include
the NHS North of England North West for their ‘Energise for Excellence
in Care Program’ and the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust’s
‘Commissioning Leader’ scheme.
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