Tuesday 13 July 2010

The increase in telecare

With the release of the UK government’s “Equity and excellence: Liberating the NHS” document the emphasis for health promotion falls on GPs as they will be getting the vast amount of money from the dissolution of the PCTs (Primary Care Trusts). This really interests me. When I worked for social services in North London, I found that GPs were by and large a very difficult group of people to interest in telecare. Actually finding access to their forum was hard and harder still to get any enthusiasm for the potentials of this new technology.

It seems that with the release of this document and the fact that the commissioning of services will be undertaken predominantly by GPs in the future that they are going to need a crash course in telecare, telehealth, mHealth and eHealth.

So how is this going to happen?

Who is going to do this?

The only way that this can be done is for telecare to be included in the documentation that the government produce but it is nowhere to be seen.

If we are to follow the preventative agenda, then surely telecare must be the spearhead of changing the way we consider health and care. Ideally as a result of the proposed changes and the distinct lack of money in the UK it behoves all GPs to get tele-trained pretty quickly.

I can see that this should also not be something that comes from the manufacturers as this could bread suspicion in GPs rather I can see a role in this for the TSA (Telecare Services Association) as well as the government to bring this information to the desktops of the General Practitioner of tomorrow. But before this can happen, how are can the profile of telecare be raised to such an extent that GPs will actually begin to take a message on board that they have resisted for the last five years?

Any answers gratefully received!