May 2022
Price: £95 PLUS VAT
Format: DOWNLOADABLE PDF
This conference examined the next steps for the use of patient records and data within the NHS and clinical research.
The agenda also looked at the opportunities for improved patient engagement in their care, including through the NHS app which enables patients to easily access their own records.
Speakers and other delegates shared experience, thinking on best practice, and views on the way forward for addressing key issues.
Areas for discussion included:
- patient data use in healthcare delivery - the current landscape - priorities for the future
- electronic health records - including their role in supporting integrated care systems
- clinical research - the next steps for utilising patient data - developing best practice
- digital health - patient data collection - use and quality - innovation priorities
- population health - achieving the potential of data collection to improve outcomes
- security - including transparency on patient data use
- public trust - digital health literacy and patient control of their own care plans
- the NHS app - its role in the future of patient-centred healthcare
We are pleased to have included a keynote session with Professor Ben Goldacre, Lead, Goldacre Review; and Director, The DataLab, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, following the recent publication of his review on the use of health data for research and analysis.
There were also contributions from Dr Janet Messer, Director of Approvals, Health Research Authority; Dr Jayne Spink, Translational Research Director, Prostate Cancer Research; and Dr Michael Chapman, Director of Research and Clinical Trials, and David Hodnett, Head of Operations, NHS App Organisation, NHS Digital.
The conference was an opportunity for stakeholders to consider the issues alongside key policy officials who attended from the DHSC; the ICO; MHRA; UKHSA; Department of Health, NI; the DIT; the DLUHC; DWP; FCDO; HMRC; NAO; ONS; OSR; The Scottish Government and the Welsh Government - as well as parliamentary pass-holders from the House of Commons.