Rapid adaptation of a local healthcare digital system to COVID-19: the experience in Birmingham (UK)
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Author
Pankhurst, TanyaAtia, Jolene
Evison, Felicity
Gallier, Suzy
Lewis, Joshua M
McKee, Deborah
Ryan, Steve
Sapey, Elizabeth
Ball, Simon
Coleman, Jamie J
Affiliation
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust; University of BirminghamPublication date
2021-10-08Subject
Health services. ManagementPublic health. Health statistics. Occupational health. Health education
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Background: The COVID-19 pandemic created unprecedented pressure on hospitals globally. Digital tools developed before the crisis provided novel aspects of management, and new digital tools were rapidly developed as the crisis progressed. In our institution, a digitally mature NHS Trust in England which builds software systems, development during the early months of the crisis allowed increased patient safety and care, efficient management of the hospital and publication of data. The aim of this paper is to present this experience as a case study, describing development and lessons learned applicable to wider electronic healthcare record development. Methods: Request, triage, build and test processes for the digital systems were altered in response to the pandemic. Senior Responsible Officers appointed for the emergency triaged all changes and were supported by expert opinion and research active clinicians. Build and test cycles were compressed. New tools were built or existing ones modified in the central Electronic Healthcare Record, PICS (Prescribing, Information and Communication System), Clinical Dashboards and video platforms for remote consultation were developed. Findings: 2236 patients were admitted to UHB with suspected COVID-19 between March and May 2020. Dashboards and visualisation tools enabled by efficient real-time data collection for all new patients, contributed to strategic, operational and clinical decision making.Over 70 urgent changes were made to digital systems, including a screening proforma, improved infection control functions, help and order panels, data dashboards, and updated prescribing features. Novel uses were found for existing functions. Interpretation: Digital tools contributed to a co-ordinated response to COVID-19 in an area with a high disease burden. Change management processes were modified during the pandemic and successfully delivered rapid software modifications and new tools. Principal benefits came from the ability to adapt systems to rapidly changing clinical situations. Lessons learned from this intense development period are widely applicable to EHR development. Lay summary: Digital tools, which are well designed, can help clinicians and safeguard patients. Health crises such as the COVID pandemic drove rapid development of digital tools. This case study outlines accelerated development within a governance framework that successfully reused existing tools and built new ones. The lessons from this development are generalizable to digital developments in healthcare.Citation
Pankhurst T, Atia J, Evison F, Gallier S, Lewis JM, McKee D, Ryan S, Sapey E, Ball S, Coleman JJ. Rapid adaptation of a local healthcare digital system to COVID-19: The experience in Birmingham (UK). Health Policy Technol. 2021 Dec;10(4):100568. doi: 10.1016/j.hlpt.2021.100568. Epub 2021 Oct 8.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/health-policy-and-technologyPMID
34642622Journal
Health Policy and TechnologyPublisher
Elsevierae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.hlpt.2021.100568
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