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2016-The Age of Digital Surgical Enlightenment - 21 Downloads

2010-2020: THE AGE OF DIGITAL SURGICAL ENLIGHTENMENT

Mr David Rew

ASGBI Director of Communications and Informatics

Evolution has seen a series of transformations in man’s ability to communicate as new technologies emerge. Pigment led to cave paintings. Papyrus, parchment and paper advanced the process of writing. The printing press permitted mass distribution of text, imagery and ideas. Since the 1940s, and over our lifetime, digital technology has transformed the power and means of written and multimedia communication at an unprecedented rate.

The Digital Revolution itself has comprised a series of now broadly mature physical technologies with which we are all familiar. These include the computer chip, desktop and mobile computer devices, and the Internet. These technologies bring unarguable benefits in terms of the speed and capacity for information transmission and storage. They have also prompted a host of new and transformational services and industries, based around the writing of innovative software.

The best technology systems mandate a very clear understanding of consumer and customer needs. A number of Governments around the world, of which the UK has been at the forefront since 2010, are taking a very enlightened approach to the digital transformation of public services, based upon three core principles, viz:

  1. Digital by Choice:
    Systems will be so easy to use that the target user group will always choose to use them over older technologies (including pen and paper).
  2. Digital by Design:
    Design of these systems will be of such a standard, arising from high quality research into user needs, that they will provide a compelling user service and experience based upon ease use and seamless and secure access. This will apply even for users who have previously been “digitally excluded” for whatever reason.

Taken to its logical conclusion, “Digital by Design” also mandates a comprehensive examination of how organisations work, and implies the possibility of a radical change in historic structures and practices, as, for example, in the relationships between citizens, and primary and secondary care providers.

  1. Digital by Default:
    This digital process will define the entire mindset of Government in the shaping of service design, policy making and institutional architecture.

The Digital Change Agent for the UK Government is the Government Digital Service (GDS) (1), which is a very near neighbour of the ASGBI and the Royal College of Surgeons at GDS Headquarters in Aviation House, Holborn, in London. The principles and the open source software which the change process is generating are being widely adopted by other digitally enlightened Governments, as for example in New Zealand (2).

Figure 1: The UHS Lifelines graphical EPR interface, as an illustration of user focussed design in the paperless transition.
This system is in live and real time daily use on an agile, continuously iterative test and development basis in selected
clinical services at University Southampton. This particular record illustrates the documents generated in the course of
treatment of a patient with bilateral breast cancer in June 2003. Clicking on any document opens the underlying
document. All subject timelines (eg Surgery, Cancer Care) for which documents exist are displayed. It is apparent how
quick and intuitive such a model can be in clinical use. Much can be learned about the pattern of health in any one
patient from inspection of the patterns of documentation alone, before inspection of specific documents and reports.
Figure 1: The UHS Lifelines graphical EPR interface, as an illustration of user focussed design in the paperless transition. This system is in live and real time daily use on an agile, continuously iterative test and development basis in selected clinical services at University Southampton. This particular record illustrates the documents generated in the course of treatment of a patient with bilateral breast cancer in June 2003. Clicking on any document opens the underlying document. All subject timelines (eg Surgery, Cancer Care) for which documents exist are displayed. It is apparent how quick and intuitive such a model can be in clinical use. Much can be learned about the pattern of health in any one patient from inspection of the patterns of documentation alone, before inspection of specific documents and reports.