The Journal of mHealth Vol 3 Issue 1 (Feb/Mar 2016) | Page 36

Digital Healthcare: Designing the Patient Journey Digital Healthcare: Designing the Patient Journey By Keith Nurcombe Keith Nurcombe has worked in healthcare for over twenty years spending the last few years working with businesses in the health and technology space, most recently building O2 Health where he was Managing Director until the end of 2012, since then he has been providing consultancy services to businesses. UX or user experience for me is all about how the patient travels through the complexity of the health system that we currently ask them to travel. Why is this important you may ask? Well, here is why, it is possibly the most important thing we ever do when we design healthcare systems. The patient of old went to the GP or their physician, told them what they thought was wrong, listened to the advice and then often took heed of this and went merrily on their way. What has changed in the last twenty years? As patients we have become educated about what we want and we have learnt that we have choices and with these choices the ability to control our destiny - to a certain extent. When we think about user experience and how we design our care pathways for the modern digital health environment we have to look at what we want to achieve clinically, and, also from a cost perspective. Critically though, we have to consider the patient, from start to finish 34 February/March 2016 not as an afterthought! In order to do this, we need to turn to organisations, which are used to managing consumer demand and interacting with those consumers throughout all aspects of their journey, and understand the lessons that they have learnt over the years. Breaking this down – what does this mean and what are the key things to consider? 1. The modern patient of the 21st century has decided that they will control what happens to them and not accept, in differing levels by patient group, what they are told, when and without choice. Healthcare systems mus BFB