From global leaders whose names, organisations and work are familiar to many, to the next generation of creators, mavericks and leaders, Neil chats to friends and colleagues across the world to better understand the forces and brilliant innovation that is shaping the future. This fascinating series…
The future of healthcare looks different depending where you’re observing it from, and today’s guest, Paul Bates, provides yet another unique perspective. Brief Summary The Babylon model and how it will revolutionise healthcare The rise of technology enabled consumerism in healthcare The delivering of personalised healthcare The drivers for changing attitudes towards personal health data Innovation in the current healthcare system Regulatory requirements for digital healthcare services
Dr. Vivek Muthu’s varied career path makes him very well placed to discuss the value and quality of healthcare, when considering what its future might look like. Brief Summary Why universal healthcare coverage means different things in different places A future of healthcare should also involve stopping certain things Why we don’t measure the product of healthcare - health outcome The lack of demand in healthcare means a lack of market for innovators The myths in healthcare that need to be busted
Don Berwick has a global perspective on healthcare, yet he still retains a focus on the individual patient, firmly believing that the future of healthcare relies on improving the quality of healthcare. In this episode we discuss the gaps in global healthcare, why current healthcare quality is frustrating, quality in healthcare needing to be a local issue, technologies and approaches that can improve future healthcare, and whether the healthcare of employees an employer’s responsibility.
Today’s guest is Dr Trishan Panch, originally a primary healthcare clinician in the UK, subsequently, the co-founder and Chief Medical Officer for a digital health company, Wellframe. In this episode we discuss why healthcare isn’t limited to medicine, how AI machine learning can automate diagnosis, how public healthcare will become individual healthcare, applying GDPR to the future of healthcare, and how healthcare leaders can learn to realise the potential of machine learning (if they hope to bring about change).
Meet Professor Gregory Katz, one of the EU's leaders and most dynamic thinkers on value-based healthcare. In this episode: What led Gregory into this work, the unsustainability of the volume-based fee for service approach to healthcare, the idea behind value-based healthcare, the importance of informed choices and actionable data for patients, examples of value-based healthcare in action, and the limitations of Lean healthcare.
The future of healthcare is changing. According to Sir Muir Gray we are fast moving out of the second healthcare revolution and we need to figure out what the function of the doctor is in the age of AI and smartphones. Brief Summary: The future doesn't just happen, it is created; Sir Muir’s experience in healthcare; The second healthcare revolution; Where we are doing too much healthcare; Healthcare and wearables; Why power now resides with citizens; The biggest change will be with clinicians.
Introducing Healthcare Futures launching in mid October 2019. For more information, visit https://www.ichom.org/podcast