字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 This year Britain's National Health Service celebrates its 70th birthday. Formed in 1948, it was the first state health service in the world. Today, the modern NHS is almost unrecognizable from the one that was created 70 years ago. It's the world's fifth biggest employer with a budget of 110 billion pounds a year. But it's in urgent need of treatment. Like many healthcare systems, the NHS is faced with a funding shortfall and critical staff shortages meaning its future looks perilous. Lord Ara Darzi is one of the world's top surgeons and a former British Health Minister. He's been on the healthcare frontline for three decades. And he's come up with a plan for reviving the NHS. These are my talking points. The government needs to transform the NHS from a sickness service to a health and wellbeing service. Most of the chronic disease is related to human behavior. The NHS spends almost nine billion pounds a year dealing with diseases related to smoking and the growing obesity epidemic. To cut costs, the government needs to tackle this public health crisis at its root. We do this in three ways. One, regulation, banning smoking was a wonderful example of that. Second, taxation. Introducing sugar tax, or a levy on alcohol. Thirdly, behavioral intervention. How do we help people make the right choices? We need to embrace innovation whether that is digital which has transformed every aspect of our life, we need to do the same in health. The NHS is still running on paper and fax. We need to move from that archaic times into the new times of digital. The NHS is the world's largest purchaser of fax machines and in some hospitals, medical equipment is no longer fit for purpose. A recent report found that machines from the 1980s were still in use in NHS hospitals. We need to decommission the old stuff and save money to pay for the new innovations. Robotics, new drugs, new interventions. We need to look at frugal innovations, technologies that are exceptionally cheap but at the same time delivering as good an outcome from a patient's perspective. In the 21st century, data is the energy or the fuel of transformation. Anything you could measure you can improve and data is one of the ways of doing that. One million people use the NHS every 36 hours. But there's no centralized system where doctors can access their medical data. Most patients seeing me expect me to have all the data from their general practice. We need to drive this integration between primary care, hospital, and back into the community. You can actually predict disease before you see the manifestation of disease by segmenting the population and identifying those at great risk. To do this, the NHS will have to tackle fears over personal data being shared. Sharing data is critical from a patient's perspective. And we need to win the confidence of the public when it comes to the privacy and security aspect of data sharing. The NHS is facing a funding gap. By 2020, it's estimated to be 20 billion pounds short. A lot of people out there think investing in healthcare is in a bottomless pit. I could confidently tell you, not just my work, look at the work of the Lancet Commission, the World Innovation Summit for Healthcare, the best return on investment any country could make is in health. Healthy nation means a productive nation. Healthy nation means economic growth. For every pound you spend in health, you get two pounds back. Quality should be the organizing principle of any health system. It's a wonderful future if we embrace it.
B1 中級 美國腔 如何重振公共醫療服務|《經濟學人》雜誌。 (How to revive public healthcare | The Economist) 32 7 Priscilla 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字