Using digital health to transform the management of long-term conditions in the NHS: Assessing real-world patient experience and empowerment and improvements to productivity and capacity
- Funded by Department of Health and Social Care / National Institute for Health and Care Research (DHSC-NIHR)
- Total publications:0 publications
Grant number: NIHR202164
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Key facts
Disease
COVID-19Start & end year
20212025Known Financial Commitments (USD)
$3,057,914.2Funder
Department of Health and Social Care / National Institute for Health and Care Research (DHSC-NIHR)Principal Investigator
N/A
Research Location
United KingdomLead Research Institution
Itecho Health LimitedResearch Priority Alignment
N/A
Research Category
Health Systems Research
Research Subcategory
Health service delivery
Special Interest Tags
Digital Health
Study Type
Clinical
Clinical Trial Details
Not applicable
Broad Policy Alignment
Pending
Age Group
Unspecified
Vulnerable Population
Unspecified
Occupations of Interest
Unspecified
Abstract
Background: Healthcare systems face increasing demands for monitoring and treatment of long-term conditions. Remote digital monitoring avoiding hospital visits offers many advantages. During the Covid-19 pandemic safety from transmission has become a major benefit. Itecho has developed the AscelusTM platform, which enables patients to send information through a 'symptom checker' to their clinical team, which reviews this, and the patient s blood tests. Patients then receive encrypted clinical advice, results of blood and other monitoring sent directly to their smart phone/device (Figure 1). Patients deemed at risk are called for face-to-face appointments. Aims and objectives: To assess, in the real-world setting, how AscelusTM impacts long-term condition management, hospital capacity/productivity and patient experience/empowerment to then support procurement, commercialisation and scale up. Methods and timelines: We will assess real-world implementation of AscelusTM in 7 haematological conditions across a comprehensive series of domains in eleven interlinked work packages, encompassing: Co-design of new digital haematological care pathways, underpinning bespoke platform amendment/integration into hospital IT systems. Patient validation and safety cohort observational studies, drawn from cohort of 4,560 patients in 3 London and 1 Sheffield site(s). Evaluation of patient experience and empowerment using focus groups, Ux laboratories, discrete choice experiments and PAM-13 scores. Economic modelling and cost/benefit analysis. Mixed methods qualitative study of clinician motivators/barriers to adoption Feasibility of future AI development for MGUS monitoring. A new (post-stage 1) work package to assess the enablers and barriers around digital inclusion. Impact and dissemination: The project will allow patients more convenience and control; hospitals/clinicians to have additional capacity for complex cases; the NHS to save resources. It will also facilitate environmental benefits (less driving/car parking). Our highly skilled, multi-disciplinary team with academic, commercial, PPI and clinical backgrounds and national leadership roles provides a great opportunity to spearhead digital transformation in haematology across the UK.