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Presentations from Health Innovation Day 2020

Health Innovation Day 2020 was arranged by the University’s profile area Health Innovation, it was live streamed and available for attendees both nationally and internationally. The speakers were all experts within the fields of health innovation and information driven care. Watch some of the filmed presentation from the conference.

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Introduction

Health Innovation in Halland

  • Health Innovation in Halland – an example of the strong collaborative environment that characterises the region.
  • Speakers: Mikaela Waltersson, Chairperson, Regional Board Halland, Ann‑Mari Bartholdsson, Senior Development Manager, Region Halland and Anders Nelson, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Halmstad University

The profiled university

  • The profiled university – Halmstad University draws from the strength of all its research environments, collaboration arenas and educational programs to solve healthcare challenges.
  • Speaker: Jens Nygren, Programme Manager profile area Health Innovation

An innovation agenda for 21st century health systems

  • Old innovation models driven by technology supply need to give way to more needs-led innovation, systems transformation and better use of data. The involvement of global tech giants give rise to both opportunities and challenges.
  • Speaker: James Barlow, Professor at Imperial College London and Guest Professor at Halmstad University

Examples of information driven care: Healthcare data systems

The healthcare data system in Region Halland enables better healthcare decisions

  • The healthcare data system in Region Halland is an effective information driven innovation that enables better informed healthcare decisions.
  • Region Halland has collaborated with Halmstad University and Harvard Medical School to now be at the forefront of structuring their healthcare system data in such a way that innovation can be applied. How did they get there and what are their next steps of development?
  • Speakers: Philip Anderson, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Markus Lingman, Chief strategy officer Halland hospital group, Region Halland

Federated learning for healthcare data

  • Real case development: Federated learning will be necessary to better take advantage of medical registers and databases. Here we will explore som federated learning techniques suitable for healthcare systems.
  • Speaker: Mattias Ohlsson, Professor of Information Technology, Halmstad University
    Content:

Business actor co-production

Leap for Life – pioneers in healthcare

  • Leap for Life is Hallands collaborative effort with information-driven care. It is an innovation centre (former Centre for Health Technology Halland) for Region Halland, Halmstad University, all municipalities in Halland and the business sector in their joint quest to change and develop the future healthcare.
  • Speaker: Magnus Clarin, Dean of School of Information Technology, Halmstad University and Lillemor Berglund, Executive director health and social care, Kungsbacka Municipality

Implementation challenges

Expecting the unexpected

  • Expecting the unexpected: lessons on barriers and facilitators to implementation in complex systems.
  • How the potential of AI can be realised in practice, drawing on evidence and theories from the fields of implementation and improvement research. This includes aspects on how AI innovations can be understood as interventions within the dynamic and complex environment of health systems and the implications for design, use and evaluation to increase chances of successful implementation and improved patient and population outcomes.
  • Speaker: Julie Reed, Guest Professor at Halmstad University and former Deputy Director and Academic Lead at Imperial College, London, UK.

Co-production with users

  • Real case development: Co-production with users for improvements in information-driven healthcare. Development and improvements of information-driven healthcare?
  • How can patients who need support from healthcare services be involved in the development and improvements of information-driven healthcare? Current models of healthcare delivery may need to invest in making co-production ideas central to their operation, and acknowledge that services shaped by collaborations between patients and healthcare professionals would create greater value. By ensuring that data from both clinical evaluations and patient-reported outcome and experience measures become inputs into shared decisions, a different kind of collaboration is created.
  • Speaker: Petra Svedberg, Professor of Nursing, Halmstad University

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