Deciding on a regional or national digital infrastructure that will support new models of care and our future ambitions for more integrated health and care in a cost effective, future-proof, and sustainable way can be quite demanding. To help with that process, the World Health Organization (WHO) and International Telecommunication Union (ITU) have recently published the Digital Health Platform Handbook (DHP): Building a Digital Information Infrastructure (Infostructure) for Health.
According to the WHO and ITU, “The concept of the DHP emerged from a recognition that most digital health progress thus far has arrived in the form of individual applications and information systems. While they do successfully accomplish specific tasks, these digital tools often operate independently from each other.”
The publishers of the handbook argue for a system-wide approach to application and architecture design that emphasises the development of an integrated, standards-based, and interoperable whole. “This is far better than a piecemeal approach that results in fragmented and isolated digital health tools.”
The DHP delivers digitalisation benefits for national or regional healthcare systems:
Furthermore, there are also important clinical benefits:
You can access the full handbook here.
In addition to Ernst & Young and Gartner, this is the third major recognition of the digital health platform approach in 2020 alone. Following this approach, Better has been working with care providers, and regional and national healthcare systems around the globe to help them set up and assemble data-driven digital health ecosystems for a decade. Some of these include The City of Moscow, Russia, Malta, and Slovenia.