Continuity of healthcare through
all life spheres of patients is a key element of recent
European agendas. The next challenge for healthcare
is to enable improved information management and better
communication among health professionals, e.g. physicians,
pharmacists, nurses etc. in hospitals, private practices,
pharmacies and also in community and homecare environments.
Successful eHealth services are nowadays transforming
the traditional paper-based workflows by e.g. e-booking,
e-prescriptions and e-reports: These services connect
systems. Yet the full transformation to eHealthcare
requires to connect people. This involves a fundamental
change of perspective. Thus, integrated healthcare core
processes must be re-engineered by a joint deployment
of organisational changes and suitable eHealth services.
The objective of the conference is not only to
raise awareness for the role and value of eHealth in
supporting and enabling the transformation of healthcare
services. eHealth is not a set of products, tools or
application but a range of responses to the need to
improve and transform healthcare services. There is
therefore a clear need for health professionals to be
significantly involved in the debate on eHealth and
its implementation.
The conference explores the concrete issues on "3C"
(Continuity, Collaboration, Communication) and their
influence on the eHealth infostructure (e.g. dissemination
and customisation of clinical pathways, clinical datasets,
reference terminologies vs. value sets, patient summaries).
The parallel sessions address the lessons learned and
the opportunities arising from success stories on the
3C.
Who should participate? The conference will be
a forum for
Health Professionals interested in
how ICT can enable the transformation of their daily
practices, for
Policy Makers in charge of eHealth
deployment strategies as well as all those concerned
by the development of healthcare policies aiming at
a sustainable evolution of the healthcare system.
The Conference is accredited
by the European Accreditation Council for Continuing
Medical Education (EACCME) for a maximum of 9 hours
of European external CME credits.