Telehealth and telecare innovations have the potential to improve quality of life, reduce unnecessary hospital and care home admissions, and support care integration by providing care and disease management from multi‐disciplinary care teams linked remotely to users. About 1.7 million people benefit from telecare services in the UK, but telehealth services have only around 5000 users, many of whom receive services through the Department of Health's Whole System Demonstrator (WSD) Pilot Programme. There is an identifiable chasm between early adopters and wider uptake of telehealth and telecare solutions. Key barriers include lack of robust evidence on cost‐effectiveness, of a consumer market and of interoperability of the technology between service sectors, and the implications for professionals and organisations of changing their established methods of practice. Telehealth and telecare could be combined to provide a common platform to integrate care for people requiring both health and social care support, but relatively few people are judged suitable for joint care. This is related both to the nature of the technology and the profile of those people who can use it, and to the different ways in which health and social care systems assess who is most 'at risk', which makes it difficult to assess which individuals might best benefit from an integrated response to their care needs. While there is considerable interest and policy momentum behind the adoption and diffusion of telehealth and telecare in England, more understanding of their benefits is required to convince commissioners and providers of its potential.
Article navigation
26 November 2010
Review Article|
November 26 2010
The State of Telehealth and Telecare in the UK: Prospects for Integrated Care Available to Purchase
Nick Goodwin
Nick Goodwin
Health Policy, The King's Fund, London, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8685
Print ISSN: 1476-9018
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2010
Journal of Integrated Care (2010) 18 (6): 3–10.
Citation
Goodwin N (2010), "The State of Telehealth and Telecare in the UK: Prospects for Integrated Care". Journal of Integrated Care, Vol. 18 No. 6 pp. 3–10, doi: https://doi.org/10.5042/jic.2010.0646
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
User Responses to Assisted Living Technologies (ALTs) — A Review of the Literature
Journal of Integrated Care (April,2010)
Promoting Self‐Management Through Technology: SMART Solutions for Long‐Term Health Conditions
Journal of Integrated Care (December,2009)
Preliminary results of a medical telecare pilot in Wrexham
Journal of Assistive Technologies (September,2009)
Telecare, telehealth and assistive technologies: do we know what we're talking about?
Housing, Care and Support (November,2008)
Explaining the operation of a home care system
Journal of Assistive Technologies (March,2015)
Related Chapters
The Potential of Using Telemedicine in Youth Sexual and Reproductive Health Services in Zimbabwe: Opportunities and Challenges
Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Role of Digital Innovation and Emerging Technologies
Technology in Medicine: COVID-19 and the “Coming of Age” of Telehealth
International Case Studies in the Management of Disasters: Natural - Manmade Calamities and Pandemics
Driving Organizational Innovation Through Human Capital Enhancement
Innovation Ecosystems and Sustainable Technologies: Enhancing Competitiveness and Sustainability
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
