PIPPI project: community of practice in procurement based on value

13 Dec
Ramon Maspons

Innovation has been present in the AQuAS blog with projects such as Antisuperbugs and Ritmocore but there are many more on the go right now. Today we put the focus on the purchase of innovation and on how this innovative methodology can have an impact on clinical practice.

We interview Ramon Maspons, engineer specialised in the management of innovation and technology, coordinator of innovation at AQuAS.

What tools does the health system at present have within its reach to add value to healthcare?

The public procurement of innovation is one of the facilitating instruments when adopting innovation and developing policies for technology and innovation. Due to the characteristics of the health sector this becomes a strategic element. There are other sectors where this does not happen because the public purchaser does not have market power.

In what way does innovation provide added value?

At a first level, we could say that if there is no application no value is generated. At a second level, I would say that the changes in the process are what add value. And at a third level, we could talk directly about the user.

A very brief article was published not long ago on this subject in the journal Annals de Medicina. Recently, in another context, the King’s Fund published a report on models of innovation.

Could you highlight an innovative project within the field of innovation?

Yes, the PIPPI project, coordinated by the Karolinska University Hospital in which AQuAS is involved, together with six other institutions in the hospital and university environment in Sweden, Holland, Italy, Austria, Spain, Finland and the United Kingdom. It is a platform made up of hospitals from the European Hospital Alliance, which is the network of the most relevant European hospitals, and then AQuAS. The focus of this work group is the new models of procurement based on value using digital technologies as an element to transform health services.

Work group of the PIPPI project

 

Have you considered changing the name of the project?

No, but in fact yes, because the name has curious meanings and connotations in different languages. This was one of the subjects that arose in the Kickoff meeting of the project.

Jokes aside, what is the involvement of AQuAS in the PIPPI project?

The expertise of AQuAS in assessment, innovation and the procurement of innovation is key. This project proposes an environment where the different stakeholders involved in change can come to an agreement and work together, both when revealing the needs of a health system, of hospitals, as well as when involving companies, technological centres, universities, patients and caregivers.

It is a very ambitious aim. What would you say is special about this project?

Its strategic focus of putting the different stakeholders involved in improving healthcare in the same project but having the support of the leadership of hospitals and an assessment agency. Identifying needs and solutions using this vast network of diverse expertise is one of the strengths of this project.

How will the PIPPI project work?

The project needs to develop a community of practice where challenges can be posed and solutions considered within an international framework.

Could you be a little more specific about which environments digital technologies will have an impact on in the health services?

By all means. We can include very different subjects such as co-creation with clinicians, telemedicine, data analytics, artificial intelligence, and so on. Some aspects are nearer on the horizon and others more distant. There exists a powerful reflection on digital technologies: it is said that everything that is digitalised is dematerialised and demonetised (it may be a subject too complex to go into here) and there are also those who say that, in the end, what is digitalised is democratised, but now that really would be going into other subjects.

Earlier you mentioned involving patients – who and what are we talking about exactly?

The patient is a key element in procurement based on value because the patient generates value and this is something difficult for other sectors to understand. When we talk of digital transformation, the involvement of patients is often as necessary as it is a sensitive issue and a certain methodology is therefore required, or specific game rules. We are talking about complex systems which require complex ways of working where, among other things, very diverse sensitivities, organisational models, governances, health systems or types of providers are involved. In short, what we are talking about is getting patients to become a part of identifying needs and taking decisions; we are talking about expert patient concepts, the participation of citizens and about health literacy.

And how are you going to achieve all this?

As members of this consortium, we have the experience, knowledge, methodologies and leadership to forge ahead with a project of this nature. I recommend looking at the presentation of Romualdo Ramos and Tanja Stamm of the Medical University of Vienna to know more about this project.

What is the aim of the PIPPI project in a few words?

Impossible in just a few words, but can I do it in nine? Facilitating the joint design of the best healthcare possible.

Innovate and Assess: how to incorporate assessment in innovation

22 Feb
Dolors Benítez

Incorporating the culture of assessment in innovative initiatives was the starting point and the challenge from which the Observatory of Innovation in Healthcare Management in Catalonia (OIGS) initiated the first edition of the Innovate and Assess training workshop, a programme to train “Agents of Change” with the focus set on assessment and innovation.

What were the contents of this initiative?

  • What is innovation, what is assessment and what is the OIGS’s process of assessment?
  • The management of change to provide tools to encourage assessment
  • A practical session in assessment
  • The conceptualisation of a proposal to implement the assessment of an innovative initiative

From the Agency for Health Quality and Assessment of Catalonia (AQuAS) and via the Community for Innovation of the OIGS, a process of assessment has been driven allowing the quality of methodology in innovative practices to be measured within the framework of the public healthcare system of Catalonia, offering professionals in health and organisations the opportunity to opt for the certification of their experiences as an added stamp of quality.

This workshop has enabled experts in innovation to get in touch with experts in assessment and share their knowledge with each other in order to improve the quality of assessment of innovation.

This training activity has been accredited with 2,0 credits by the Catalan Council of Ongoing Training for Healthcare Professions.

The main aim has been to create and facilitate the necessary tools to be able to carry out assessment and innovation in healthcare centres in an adequate manner.

On the one hand, Cari Almazán, Cristina Colls, Núria Radó, Dolores Ruiz-Muñoz and Maite Solans, experts at the AQuAS in different disciplines participated, working with professionals and provided their knowledge and recommendations from the point of view of assessment.

On the other hand, Dani Bernard, Ignasi Clos, Xavi Olba and Clàudia Pardo of Induct, offered their expertise in the field of innovation using dynamics and techniques such as user journey map and cubbing.

Cubbing

With the intention of boosting the number of certified innovative initiatives (as we mentioned, using criteria to measure the quality of methodology), as well as spreading the word about the Observatory as a support tool in the assessment of the Catalan healthcare system as a whole, the AQuAS provides assistance, or mentoring, to all those professionals that provide self-evaluations of their own experiences but who do not attain the required quality of methodology to obtain certification.

At present, the OIGS has become a point of reference within the Catalan healthcare system, and day after day it places value on the effort made by organisations that share and divulge their innovative experiences and who promote the assessment of innovation.

Post written by Dolors Benítez.

Time to digitally disconnect?

14 Sep

It is very common to see groups of people looking at their mobile devices in any place at any time: on holiday, at work, at home, in the underground, on the bus, in a congress, ….. wherever. It is also common to take advantage of our holidays to say that we will make the most of these days to disconnect from our routines. Does this include disconnecting our mobile phones, tablets, laptops, the TV or email?

At AQuAS, as an agency involved in health assessment, we do not know this. What we do know is that there is more and more talk of connected health, a term which includes mHealth, eHealth and all related concepts, which have been a part of everyday life for some time now.

At a level of the Catalan system of health, we have in this post by Òscar Solans an example of the development of technological tools which involve new ways of interaction between patients and the health system. In this way, La Meva Salut and eConsult are useful tools when placing the patient, the person that is, at the centre of all the interactions there are with the health professionals coming from different fields.

At a European level, Jean Patrick Mathieu and Rossana Alessandrello wrote about how complex the subjects of interoperability and the implementation of mobile technological solutions are, in this other post. This was the framework for the European project DECIPHER whose goal was to facilitate the access to health information from different countries and health systems.

Let’s change the perspective. At an individual level, who does not have an app downloaded on their mobile phone? Which of these apps have to do with something related to health, such as weight control, for example, or as support when doing physical exercise, to keep track of menstrual cycles, fertility calendars or aspects of mental and emotional health? And no need to limit ourselves to talking about mobile devices: who has not heard of calculators for aspects of health such as calculators of life expectancy?

Downloading an app is very easy and can even be free. In this post by Elisa Puigdomènech, she highlighted the fact that in mid-2016 The Economist explained there were some 165,000 apps related to health. This figure must no doubt have increased.

What does the success of an app depend on? What guarantees of quality and safety do they offer?

Regarding the first question, the user experience was the subject on which Elisa Puigdomènech put the emphasis, based on the experience obtained in the PEGASO project. Along the same lines, Santi Gómez spoke about the fact that the development of a health application must, in all phases of its development, include the participation of those who will ultimately be the end users.

And in terms of the second question, any health intervention should be safe, be based on evidence, on the best quality knowledge available and should be assessable. This is the premise with which we at the AQuAS work and this is the role that an assessment agency can play when thinking about connected health. Thus, this post by Toni Dedéu places the emphasis on the fact that technologists, assessors, professionals and citizens have the opportunity to work together and combine their expertise but not forgetting the speed of innovation.

In conclusion, the assessment of connected health is a current topic. This article was recently published, and is a good example of a proposal for a conceptual framework. We end this post with an editorial about innovation and evidence which invites one to reflect on assessment and innovation.

Post written by Marta Millaret (@MartaMillaret)