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PROFESSIONAL SUPPLIES


NHS telecare could be rented


The NHS should rent telecare equipment through monthly contracts, like those used for mobile


phones, care services


minister Paul Burstow has suggested.


The strategy has already been tried in Gloucestershire, where the provider covers up-front costs, including clinical engagement, pathway redesign and training. NHS Gloucestershire then rents telecare on a per patient per month basis.


Speaking at the King’s Fund International Congress on Telehealth and Telecare on March 7, Burstow said: “NHS Gloucester avoids the need for large scale up-front costs, and it enables the supplier to build relationships with patients and customers that it otherwise would not have.”


But potential obstacles to the roll-out of this strategy include broadband capacity, which can be low in rural areas. Additionally,


issues with staff lacking sufficient understanding and skills for using telecare have led the Government to ask the NHS Institute to develop a support programme for staff and patients.


Burstow continued: “Costs in the UK are significantly higher than they are in the US, and it is no wonder because in the current situation we have only 6,000 users, compared to 10 times that number in


the veterans’


association in the US. That is why we are looking at promoting our campaign, 3millionlives, why we want to grow this rapidly.”


Chief executive of independent think


tank 2020health.org,


Julia Manning, who sits on NHE’s editorial board, wrote on telehealth and the experience of


the USA’s Veterans Health


Administration (VHA) in the January/February 2012 edition of National Health Executive. That edition is available on the NHE website.


national health executive Mar/Apr 12 | 69


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