by Richard Barker, Chair at Health Innovation Network and Guy Boersma, Chief Executive at Kent Surrey Sussex AHSN
From our perspective working within the Academic Health Science Network (AHSN) system, we are seeing advances in thinking and practice in several key areas for the future of the NHS, and the Network is collecting lessons learned for future dissemination. But we would like to suggest a few of these at this early stage, under three headings – gains to hold, further gains to push for, based on the Covid experience, and change in healthcare system dynamics if we are to fully grasp these gains.
Gains to hold
‘Gains to hold’ include both how healthcare is being practised in the midst of Covid-19, how we are introducing innovation into practice, greater flexibility in roles within the NHS and productive partnerships between the public, private and third sectors of the health economy.
Most obvious is the rapid and dramatic shift to remote medical consultations. Using online tools and simple phone calls, we have demonstrated that many primary care and specialist consultations can quite effectively be done remotely. For example, skin lesion images and heart irregularities can be transmitted to inform these sessions, and of course patients can report the outcomes of current treatments. The level of such remote consultations will undoubtedly fall to some extent after the crisis, but we will have seen a major breakthrough in their use and widespread adoption of the relevant supportive digital tools, and the AHSNs have been intimately involved in ensuring these tools are introduced. With this learning and with the benefit of a further period of time, there is the opportunity to refine utilisation and get the most out of newly familiar technology.
We have also seen redeployment of people and skills on a massive scale, across medical disciplines, between doctors, nurses, ancillary workers and pharmacists. We have learned that knowledge can be transmitted as fast as the virus, if not faster, and systems for democratising knowledge should emerge from our experience.
As AHSNs, we are also very focused on partnerships across the public, private and charity sectors of the health economy, and our boards are one of the few places in which all three come together around the same problem-solving table. The UK history has unfortunately too often been of mutual misunderstanding or suspicion across cultural divides. The Covid-19 crisis has broken these down dramatically, with just one example of a major pharmaceutical company approaching their local Academic Health Science Network to help plug the yawning gap in viral testing. And, of course, many companies whose business is not health have pitched in, whether to manufacture masks or other PPE, or support their local communities. Let us work so that the partnerships forged in the crisis lay the foundation for a much more collaborative future.
Further gains to push for
Holding the gains requires us all to capture the learning, now, on how positive change has been delivered at pace and scale: the generous collaborations, the inspired communications, the courageous changemaking, the focused strategy, and so on. We then need to consider how to incorporate this behaviour into a calmer future environment. Learning from the virus’ impact on those who are frail and have underlying health conditions brings into fresh focus how the NHS thinks about its job and its performance. As was pointed out in a recent All-Party Parliamentary Group report, Health of the Nation, the NHS is still an illness service in its productivity measures.
For the NHS to become more of a health service than an illness service, it needs to value more highly its contribution to maintaining the public’s long-term health and resilience, via an increased investment in self-care and in supporting citizens with long term conditions to manage and maintain independence for longer.
Despite fine words on focusing ‘upstream’, only about 5 per cent of the NHS budget goes on prevention – and secondary care cost inflation pressurises it out of hospital budgets. So, we have a rising tide of health-vulnerable people, particularly in the more deprived sectors of the population. ‘Underlying health conditions’ – most of them avoidable – are clearly major factors in morbidity and mortality from the virus. They are of course major factors in healthy lifespan in general – virus or no virus. We need to keep this firmly in mind when shaping the plans and budgets of the new primary care networks and ICSs and in HM Treasury / DHSC negotiations. And most prevention does not have an in-year ROI.
Changing healthcare system dynamics
Finally, we believe this period is a wakeup call that should cause us to change some beliefs about our healthcare system and the behaviours of staff and citizens. Firstly, the belief that our health is the NHS’ problem, not our own. Personal responsibility for maintaining strong health status and reducing health vulnerability will surely increase in the wake of Covid-19, and we should see a growth in demand from citizens and response from innovators for tools to enable this. Secondly, the belief that health workers – particularly domiciliary workers and health assistants – are doing low level work that merits low pay. Thirdly, that the NHS and private providers are enemies: in contrast, we have seen that agreements to work together and switch capacity reveal that they are on the same side in any health battle. Finally, that the NHS is a supertanker that we can never expect to move fast. It can and it has. We must collectively learn from how this was achieved and how the NHS can continue to respond positively to population needs at a faster pace and scale.
Read here, to find out what AHSNs are doing to transform lives during Covid-19.
Prof Richard Barker is Chairman of the Health Innovation Board. Richard is a strategic advisor, speaker and author on healthcare and life sciences. As a workstream champion in the Accelerated Access Review, he has advised successive UK governments on new healthcare tech.
Guy Boersma has focused on improving public services from within the NHS, central government, private sector and professional services firms. He has worked across the NHS in Kent & Medway, Surrey and Sussex since 2010.












