| Literature DB >> 32586326 |
Shuhei Nomura1,2,3, Vera Siesjö4,5, Göran Tomson4,6, Wiebke Mohr4,6, Eriko Fukuchi7,8, Kenji Shibuya9,10, Viroj Tangcharoensathien11, Hiroaki Miyata7,10,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Demographic changes in the pattern of disease burden, escalating health expenditures and inequitable access to healthcare are global challenges. Irrespective of their level of development, all countries need to reform their health systems to prepare for the future emerging health needs, in order to meet their commitments of health systems strengthening, universal health coverage (UHC) and explicit targets in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). We propose three core principles for the future health system as described herein. A health system is not simply a 'cure delivery machine' but part of a 'social security system' that engages all stakeholders through a shared vision and value of health and well-being, not merely an absence of diseases. The future health system shall provide people-centred, affordable care, tailored to the individual's needs, accessible at any time and any place, and reflect the notion of leaving no one behind through a life course approach - underpinned by the SDGs. Information and communications technology (ICT) offers the potential to facilitate the realisation of these principles by improving the information flow between different parts of the health system through electronic means. We introduce Japan's new data platform - Person-centred Open PLatform for wellbeing (PeOPLe) - planned to be introduced in 2020 as one example of an ICT-based intervention to realise the three proposed principles. PeOPLe integrates data collected throughout the life course to enable all people to receive affordable, personalised health and social care at any time and any place throughout their lifetime. Furthermore, we discuss the applicability of these principles and PeOPLe to the health systems context of Thailand and the Philippines, including elaborations on ICT transformation challenges.Entities:
Keywords: Future health system; Information and communications technology; PeOPLe; Universal health coverage
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32586326 PMCID: PMC7318469 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-020-00585-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1Using ICTs to accelerate health system strengthening. To best conceptualise the ICTs as a foundation for the ‘health information’ building block in the WHO’s health system framework [4], the framework was modified to have ICTs in the centre with all other building blocks around it. The five key functions that ICTs could contribute in this context were based on the recent literatures [5, 6]
Fig. 2GBD level 3 causes of DALYs per 100,000 population in Japan, Thailand and the Philippines in 2005 and 2017. Source: GBD 2017 [1]. DALYs disability-adjusted life-years; GBD Global Burden of Disease, Injuries, and Risk Factors, UI uncertainty interval. Orange: communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional diseases; Blue: non-communicable diseases; Green: injuries. Ranking is based on the DALYs per 100,000 population
Four W questions addressing the past and present and proposing the future of health systems
| 4 Ws | Past | Present | Future |
|---|---|---|---|
| Where | Hospital-based health system | Community-based health system | Anywhere in a social system |
| What | Acute care | Long-term care | People-centred care (personalised, affordable, accessible) |
| When | In the case of acute and communicable diseases | In the case of chronic and non-communicable diseases | At any time |
| Who | Ambulatory patients (younger population) | Elderly patients (older population) | All people, leaving no one behind, through a life course approach |