Technology behemoth Philips is launching a”next generation electronic medical record” which combines the clinical and administrative into one system.

Named Tasy, it is a single platform that intends to put the patient at its centre, according to Philips global chief innovation and strategy officer, Jeroen Tas.

Tasy combines patient care, bed management, room scheduling, finance reporting and other medical, organisational and administrational processes.

Talking to Digital Health News at London’s recent Artificial Intelligence (AI) Summit, Tas described how Philips believes this will support a move to “continuous health”.

Joining him was Stephen McMillan, Philips’ solutions lead for UK and Ireland, who said that “the Tasy system has been based around the patient”.

Personal frustrations

Tas has a familial drive to attempt to transform how health technology works with and for patients.

His daughter, diagnosed as a child with diabetes, “has to do quarterly checkups, and I keep saying I don’t understand this”, he said, “because check-ups should be related to your needs now, not to the calendar of the provider”.

The shift, for Tas, is from healthcare being organised around separate events, to continuous care that is aided by technology.

“Healthcare has always been around these discrete events, now we strongly believe in what we call continuous health, where these become part of a more holistic view of that patient across the care continuum.”

Tasy and the NHS

Tasy has not been put into any NHS trusts yet, and when questioned on whether there are any active conversations ongoing, McMillan commented, “I don’t think we can go into that just now”.

However, he suggested the join up between the administrative and the clinical could suit the UK market, and help support a move from measuring activity to measuring outcomes.

“In the UK systems have been based around events, events that are paid for. The Tasy system has been based around the patient in order to identify outcomes, not outcomes at the very end, outcomes throughout the journey.”

Tas, who has the global role at Philips, also described why the NHS is different to other healthcare markets that Philips are in.

“For us, the UK is very interesting because the NHS is both the payer and the provider. We believe that the NHS has a big stake in enabling the kind of healthcare that we’ve been describing.”

“To us, it’s also a market where there is an opportunity to bring in some of these new concepts of healthcare, and really have an impact.”

Philips has a long history with the NHS, but its heritage is based around imaging, rather than providing an EPR. However, Tasy entered the European market for the first time last month, with an agreement with Krankenhaus Düren hospital in Germany.

Stephen McMillan, Solutions Lead, UK and Ireland at Philips
Stephen McMillan, solutions lead, UK and Ireland at Philips

Infrastructure in the UK

When asked how such a system would interact with the UK’s ageing healthcare infrastructure, Tas suggests a new conversation needs to be started, with Philips “a big proponent of also starting that discussion”.

“If [healthcare systems] talk about infrastructure, it’s largely hospitals, clinics, GP offices. I rarely hear people talk about core IT infrastructure, by definition, that has to transcend the specific physical locations.”

In his keynote he listed a litany of problems that the NHS is currently facing including queues at GPs and frantic A&Es, and said, “we are not going to solve these issues with this traditional brick and mortar”.

“We have to solve these issues through technology.”

Data regulations

However, health data is an area in which governments and companies have to tread very carefully.

The ongoing fallout from care.data indicates the importance of communication about who has access to what data and for purpose. It a lesson which Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust also learnt when involving Google’s DeepMind Health with health data.

Tas says operating in this sphere is about “value and trust, these are the two critical aspects. Do you trust it and do you see the value?”

However, he says that currently with data there is “very unclear legislation around it, around ownership and use. If we all believe that this is where things are going, this stuff needs to be addressed”.

“We believe that the one who generates the data [the patient] basically owns the data. But, there are good reasons for people to say ‘hey, I’m willing to share that data’.”

The importance of trust was most recently shown when reports emerged that the Information Commissioner’s Office has raised “data protection compliance concerns” about data sharing in TPP’s SystmOne.

TrueVue-with-Triplets - Philips
Triplets in the womb using Philips’ TrueVue

Public already using AI

However, Tas is asking the public to trust Philips when it comes to using artificial intelligence (AI) in its healthcare, which he says will be enabled in virtually all their products in the next five years.

Tas compared this to Alexa, Siri or Google photos where deep learning happens, “and I don’t hear anybody asking what they are doing”.

“Our whole society is made up of software programs running somewhere, so I think the public is interested to the value to them and the trust.”

But questions are being asked by privacy campaign group, MedConfidential, who are keeping a close eye on suppliers’ access to NHS data.

The system cant replace a healthcare professional

While Tasy can link up different departments within a hospital, and AI can bring all the latest research to the fore, technology still cannot replace a clinician says Tas.

“Ultimately it’s their decision, the system is not going to decide for them, the system is going to tee up the information, the guidelines, the contextual information so that they can make the right decision.”

But there is a confidence and assurance at Philips that, whether the healthcare system is ready or not, the technology will be arriving soon as Tas declared in his keynote.

“The impact of AI is going to be incredibly profound, it’s going to change the way medicine is practised, it’s going to change your life”.

“There’s a lot of hurdles, but these hurdles we will overcome, because this is way too compelling.”