Why mobilised data is the most valuable tool in healthcare
Data numbers.

As chief clinical information officer at Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Dr Martin Farrier feels there should be a shift in focus from what is inputted into an EPR system towards what is outputted, such that the information can be mobilised and enable improvements to care practices.

Building on his own experiences of data saving lives using EPR data, Dr Farrier’s view is that healthcare IT systems, such as the trust’s Sunrise EPR from Altera Digital Health, are just as important, if not more so, than our hospital buildings. 

This is because they enable the movement and reuse of data. Dr Farrier explains why mobilised data is the most valuable tool in healthcare and that this will especially be the case in the maturing ICS context.

Reflecting on the start of the pandemic, the data we held was collected for a single purpose and could only really be used for that purpose. 

We did not have the tools to extract data effectively and the data was too often entered in a way that could not be searched. Typically, that was as free text entry. 

Seeking to alter the way that we collect data can make it transferrable. The journey that data makes is important and its mobility enables it to be more than a single point.

The global pandemic, in the shadow of which healthcare continues to struggle, forced us to design systems that didn’t exist. 

Whilst they were needed for the recording of care, they were designed with the knowledge that the data generated from the system would be needed to plan services. 

Once we managed to develop the systems and configure our EPR to help create a database of COVID-19 patients that could be used and updated in real time, we were able to streamline our processes. 

This helped garner an accurate list of people, we could identify all the positive tests, and then cross-check that with the clinical notes and confirm true cases, admissions and outcomes. Using this data, we were able to reduce mortality of COVID-19 patients in our care.
 

The real-world importance of this information reinforced the real value that high-quality, mobilised data can provide. 

Our EPR helped pull together many data points including survival data, comorbidities and length of stay – which ultimately helped improve the patient experience, and, more importantly, improve outcomes. Monitoring the role of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in the management of respiratory failure associated with COVID-19 is one example of how we used data to quickly identify and prove a potentially viable treatment option for a specific cohort of patients, as explored in the BMJ Open study

We also learned how, globally, this therapy could have significance economically for healthcare provision in under-developed countries.
    
The journey of COVID-19 data and its movement is possible because of it being transferrable. It was collected because clinicians needed results and records. 

It exists where they need it, but it can travel. This data can be put together with co-morbidities and with treatments. We can compare all of those to outcomes. When we do that, the power of data is unleashed. 

No longer is it used to record a choice for an individual, but it becomes the story of the population and the evidence we need to make choices for all. We now have the ability to determine the most appropriate treatments and improve patients’ chances of recovery. 

It is this evolution of data that raises hope that we are moving in the right direction — especially in a maturity ICS context where data sharing and interoperability are vital.

Although the healthcare industry may continue to lag behind other industries such as banking or aviation, healthcare is starting to understand the value that technology can offer. 

Data that is mobilised and able to be reused, can help relieve the immense pressure on resources, while supporting the need to improve and streamline the patient journey. 

This is bolstered by a cultural shift that is taking place as more of the workforce appear to be receptive and open minded to embracing digital tools – and I sense this is also linked to recognising the benefits that meaningful and accurate data can provide

Striving for patient empowerment

Information technology needs to be on a level playing field with physical hospital assets, as you cannot provide care to patients without either. In the future, our health system will not function effectively without suitable IT systems embedded. 

The patient journey has the potential to be so much more connected with the right IT systems sharing data that can be used for analytical purposes beyond the need for which it was first recorded, but this also requires significant investment. 

The paternalistic relationship between doctors and their patients is starting to shift in terms of who is in control of the data, but it has the potential to evolve further so that patients are truly empowered and at the centre of their care. Paternalistic relationships are no longer accepted across many of areas in society, and now, because of this shift in data usage, it is no longer accepted in healthcare. 

The EPR should be a data source, not a destination

WWL has been live with Altera Digital Health’s Sunrise™ EPR since 2016, with the data functionality being transformed in recent years. 

Being the single provider for the area under one local authority with 350,000 patients, and an integration with the Greater Manchester Care Record, the trust is able to operate smoothly in the Integrated Care System (ICS) context. An agile way of working has enabled us to adapt to new standards, and really make the most of the data we are capturing. 

The EPR provides a treasure trove of data, but just collecting and storing it shouldn’t be the extent of ambitions for digitally enabled healthcare. 

We must use the data for a greater good, and as a system we need to realise its true potential by sharing positive experiences, while always striving to improve and allowing all stakeholders to recognise the value of working collaboratively. 

Ultimately, the data from the EPR could serve a larger system that is owned by the patient, and so the EPR would be the data source, rather than the data destination.