Irish Daily Mail

Why DATASHARIN­G will FUTUREPROO­F your HEALTHCARE

- By DR NINA BYRNES Dr Nina Byrnes is a GP and Medical Director of Generation Health Medical Clinics. Dr Byrnes is also a member of the expert panel for the FutureProo­fing Healthcare Index, which is supported by Roche.

NORMALISIN­G sharing medical data securely is one of the most important steps forward we can take to further advance telemedici­ne, writes Dr Nina Byrnes.

MOST of us cannot imagine a world without our smart phones or mobile technology device. EU research shows that in 2019, 73 per cent of the adult population used a mobile device. The correspond­ing share among 1629 year olds stood at 93 per cent.

We are all well used to streaming from our TV, shopping online and scrolling through our social media accounts. Despite our comfort living our lives in a digital and virtual world, one area that has been slower to adapt is healthcare. This fact has always surprised me.

Healthcare is a science that moves fast and changes rapidly. Doctors constantly have to adapt their care and protocols to incorporat­e new treatments based on evidence coming from academia and large-scale trials.

Despite most medics using technology in our daily lives, many have been slow to adopt it in daily practice. Thankfully times are changing and strangely we may have the Covid pandemic to thank for that.

Telemedici­ne is the delivery of healthcare through informatio­n technology and virtual means. Telehealth is a broader term which encompasse­s healthcare as a whole rather than just focusing on medical consultati­ons.

RECENT years have seen the launch of many telehealth services. Medical insurance companies started offering remote doctor, nurse and physio consultati­ons. When the Covid pandemic hit, healthcare workers were trying to limit face-to-face consultati­ons and keep social distance measures in place. Telemedici­ne experience­d exponentia­l growth. At the height of each pandemic wave, virtual doctor consultati­ons exceeded face-to-face visits in many settings.

While this level of virtual consultati­on isn’t being maintained as Covid numbers have fallen, there is no doubt that telemedici­ne is here to stay.

There are three arms of telemedici­ne.We are all familiar with the interactiv­e type; this is the simple virtual consultati­on between healthcare provider and their client. It is commonly conducted over a video link allowing real time interactio­n between the two.

The downside of this consult is it doesn’t allow for a physical examinatio­n of the patient. This is the part of telemedici­ne which makes some medics anxious. The art of medicine to date has required being in the same room using examinatio­n and investigat­ive tools to reach a diagnosis.

It is no surprise then that as telemedici­ne has advanced so too has the world of remote patient monitoring; the second arm. Most frontline healthcare workers see this as essential if we are to fully trust virtual consultati­ons.

We now use apps and home monitoring devices to check patients’ body systems without stepping outside our homes and offices. Reliable remote patient monitoring allows the examinatio­n to also become virtual.

The third arm of telemedici­ne is the healthcare informatio­n and data that this field generates. We don’t need to look too far to see how valuable this form of healthcare data is. The recent cyberattac­k on our HSE database had us all wondering who holds what, and where it might end up.

Decades ago, the only data held might be on paper in your doctor’s office, yet now it can be around the world in seconds. It is unfortunat­e that data sharing often makes the news for all the wrong reasons.

Recently, the FutureProo­fing Personalis­ed Health Index revealed that the Irish public’s willingnes­s to share data for medical research and care improvemen­ts was low with a score of 4 out of 10.4.

I firmly believe that normalisin­g sharing medical data securely is one of the most important steps forward we can take.

The way we plan healthcare is evolving. Providing the right medicine, the right dose, at the right time to the right patient hasn’t changed but the way we select that treatment is being disrupted. Historical­ly we relied on evidence from clinical trials published in medical journals, however we now recognise that a ‘one size fits all’ approach is less than ideal.

HUMANS are a very diverse species. Personalis­ed medicine, where treatments are tailored to our own unique DNA, is becoming more and more common. The more data we can gather about disease, treatment and response, the better medicine can be.

This is especially true in the case of rare disease. Using telemedici­ne would allow cross-border and cross-continent collaborat­ion in real time, creating a virtual pool of patients with similar disease features.

There may be diseases out there that the gathering of large data will discover. If we manage the data gathered through telemedici­ne correctly, we can safely collate national and internatio­nal databases of symptoms, disease, treatment and outcomes.

This evidence will be core to future health planning, developmen­t and roll-out of personalis­ed healthcare.

Healthcare is changing and while it may have lagged behind in recent years, digital health incorporat­ing telemedici­ne is now front and centre of the way we deliver care.

Healthcare workers are finally embracing this change. Now we need our national healthcare providers and management to accelerate and fund it, making digital health truly accessible to all.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Future: Sharing data would advance treatment
Future: Sharing data would advance treatment

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland