Comment: Mobile technology: the missing link between health and social care integration?

Published: 4-Nov-2013

Colin Reid from TotalMobile on how mobile technology can help bridge the gap between health and community services


Frontline carers are vital in delivering both health and social services in the community. However, by embracing mobile technology in their daily routines they can bring the two disciplines closer together, according to COLIN REID, chief executive at TotalMobile

It is no secret that health and social care integration is high on the UK Government’s agenda, particularly in regards to looking after older people. Our aging society is forcing local organisations such as councils, NHS trusts, GPs and their Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) to work closer together, and there is a lot of strategic discussion and debate as to how to meet the Government’s directives. Maybe now is the time to take a bottom-up approach to integration and look at the practical ways we can support both sets of frontline workers in the first instance.

Integrate at the point of delivery

Both health professionals and social care workers play a pivotal role in the ever-increasing necessity for out-of-hospital care. Whether they are assessing and recording clinical activities, or completing a care plan, both social workers and healthcare professionals need relevant and up-to-date information to ensure those who need support get the right care at the right time.

Despite the digital transformation within the NHS and the emphasis placed on ICT for health and social care integration, mobile working, at this stage, does not necessarily mean mobile technology

Despite the digital transformation within the NHS and the emphasis placed on ICT for health and social care integration, mobile working, at this stage, does not necessarily mean mobile technology. Putting the right technology, literally, in the hands of frontline workers and making sure they are better connected for home visits can increase the amount of care for those in need and reduce time spent on ancillary activities including travel, paperwork and data entry.

Mobile working can provide common ground from which to start health and social care integration. For example, a social worker equipped with a mobile device that can access case notes, care plans and assessments will make better decisions on behalf of the person they are supporting, in addition to involving that person in their own care. If the same social worker was also able to access information from the health side, a better picture of the person’s wellbeing can be painted. This creates more informed decision-making and can reduce unnecessary readmissions to hospital.

Mobile working in action

Frontline carers will engage with mobile technology because the benefits are immediate. We have found, following a pilot of our application on mobile devices at a social enterprise in the south west of England, community nurses are adopting the technology with ease. The key here is providing intuitive software.

Mobile technology is so popular in people’s personal life now that many frontline carers can instantly relate to how the technology works. For example, the community nurses have been able to complete tasks on the move, such as replying to emails, updating clinical information, acquiring patient’s signature on treatment plans, in addition to using useful auxiliary tools such as maps to navigate to home visits.

Time to deliver

Local organisations do not need to wait for large-scale investments to ‘rip and replace’ current systems or systems integration in order to deliver more co-ordinated care

From a technical perspective, integrating at the point of delivery is completely possible. Local organisations do not need to wait for large-scale investments to ‘rip and replace’ current systems or systems integration in order to deliver more co-ordinated care. Care providers can start working on a practical level; there is no need to wait for a national standard approach to integrating health and social care.

To enable integration at the point of delivery, effective mobile working must focus on the end user; it is not a case of recreating the office environment in the field. This means the focus should not be on accessing a single type of data, but pulling in multiple sources of information and presenting it to the health or social care worker in a way that works for them, giving them all the facts relevant to them and not just a single system view.

Multiple providers, one service

Ultimately, those who need support are not concerned whether their care is being provided by the NHS, local council or a private provider; they look at it holistically. To them, it is all part of a service whether it is clinical tasks, taking medication, bathing or cooking meals.

Using mobile technology to its full potential can link both health and social care information together, empowering frontline staff to carry out tasks with all the facts available. And for those on the frontline it does not matter which discipline they represent; they both want to make a difference.

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