Why need a EU strategy to improve digital empowerment for active healthy living of citizens and limit health inequalities in Europe? On behalf of the IDEAHL-Consortium Passed
Wednesday May 24, 2023 11:00 - 12:00 F3
Lecturers: Beatrice Avagnina, Diana Schack Thoft, Kerryn Butler-Henderson, Marta Pisano González, Sarah Wamala-Andersson
Workshop facilitator: Matt Richardson
Track: Eng - Implementation / Change Managment
Digital health technologies are a driving force for helping citizens and health professionals address preventable risk factors associated with diseases. They can facilitate early detection and treatment and support healthy ageing. Digital health solutions are also key to support a shift in care provision by empowering citizens in accessing their personal health data and managing their own health.
Several countries in Europe have a national eHealth strategy, legislation to protect electronic patient data, and ongoing eHealth initiatives. Despite these advancements and their acceleration during the Covid-19 pandemic, a large number is left behind and less empowered to better manage their health in the era of digital transformation.
However, the recent evidence from the World Health Organisation on equity in digital health technologies indicate digital literacy as a key driver of differences in access to health care and health outcomes. Thus, enhancing digital health literacy is vital to limit health inequalities from expanding.
Both health and digital literacy are commonly conceptualized through competency-based frameworks that influence daily decisions related to health.
Digital literacy is defined as a skill of understanding and utilizing information from different digital sources. It encompasses four skills: Internet search, hypertext navigation, knowledge assembly, and
content evaluation (Gilster,1997; 2006).
Health literacy (HL) is related to people’s knowledge and competency in accessing, understanding, appraising, using and applying information relevant to health to make judgments and decisions in everyday life concerning healthcare services, health promotion and disease prevention.
Digital health literacy (dHL) is the ability to seek, find, understand, and appraise health information from electronic resources to make appropriate health decisions or solve a health problem.
IDHEAL: The ‘Improving Digital Empowerment for Active Healthy Living’ (IDEAHL) project, is funded by the European Commission’s Horizon Europe programme (Grant Agreement No 101057477), https://ideahl.eu/ The IDHEAL consortium consists of 14 research and practitioner organisations in 10 European countries together with over 1,300 stakeholders especially health care professionals, policy makers, digital and (d)HL experts, and citizens. IDEAHL will co-create, test, and evaluate an inclusive and comprehensive EU strategy on (d)HL, which can be implemented at national and regional levels.
The IDEAHL initiative is a Europewide effort that aims to create a comprehensive and inclusive EU strategy for improving (d)HL. Cocreation of health literacy policies and practices is the best way to achieve this, through engagement of stakeholders. As part of this, a network of champion practices, and pilots of promising practices will be initiated.
A map of current (d)HL at country and regional levels will also be created, using validated monitoring mechanisms identified by the initiative. In this way, IDEAHL will help empower EU citizens in using digital tools to play a more active role in managing their own health and well-being, and support innovation for person-centred care models. All this will contribute to reigning over health-related expenses to sustainable levels. Stakeholder engagement is central to the initiative to achieve these outcomes.
This strategy will involve the formulation of (d)HL-promoting policies, the recommendation and testing (d)HL-strengthening interventions, and the monitoring of valid (d)HL indicators across Europe. The target audiences of the strategy’s activities are both at the professional level (who can develop, deploy, recommend, and prescribe the use of digital health services) as well as the public level (who will make up the user-base of digital health services).
IDEAHL will create a knowledge exchange network of those identified (d)HL practices across the EU and beyond to facilitate the best performing practices as well as help improve those that may be underperforming. Successful practices (so-called “champions”) and less successful (“survivors”) will be demonstrated.
The planned EU strategy for improving (d)HL will be co-created through dedicated workshops at local level, online social media campaign and online co-creation exercises, and additional consultations e.g., survey involving more than 1,300 stakeholders identified by the IDEAHL consortium partners. These include representatives from policy makers, health care professionals, digital experts, academia, civil society organisations, citizens, and the media.
The EU strategy will improve digital empowerment and (d)HL for active healthy living of citizens in Europe. This strategy will involve the formulation of (d)HL-promoting policy targets, the recommendation and testing (d)HL-strengthening interventions, and the monitoring of valid (d)HL indicators across Europe. The target audiences of the strategy’s activities are both at the professional level (who can develop, deploy, recommend, and prescribe the use of digital health services) as well as the public level (who will make up the user-base of digital health services).
By 2024, the IDEAHL initiative will create an implementable, EU-wide strategy to enable use of (d)HL best practices and monitoring methods, using co-creation methods involving a wide range of stakeholders. Successful implementation of the EU strategy will be largely dependent on the real commitment of policy and decision-makers in the early stages of the strategy-forming process.
In this seminar we will present the following:
- Improving Digital Empowerment for Active Healthy Living (IDEAHL). Improving digital empowerment for active healthy living of citizens in Europe through partnerships that influence policies in Europe.
- Mapping health literacy and digital health literacy in Europe through equity lenses. Key results from the scoping review.
- Development of the Global Atlas of Literacies in Health (GALH).
- Co-creation of solutions to improve digital empowerment for active healthy living of citizens in Europe
Disclaimer. Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Health and Digital Executive Agency (HADEA). Neither the European Union nor the grating authority can be held responsible for them.
Speakers:
- Marta Pisano González, PhD. Head of Centered Care Service. General Direction of Care and Social Healthcare, Ministry of Health. Asturias. Spain. Improving Digital Empowerment for Active Healthy Living (IDEAHL). Improving digital empowerment for active healthy living of citizens in Europe through partnerships that influence policies in Europe.
- Diana Schack Thoft, PhD., Associate Professor and Research manager at the Centre of Health and Applied Technology. University college of Northern Denmark. Mapping health literacy and digital health literacy in Europe through equity lenses. Key results from the scoping review.
- Kerryn Butler-Henderson, PhD., Professor, Director, Digital Health. RMIT Australia. Development of the Global Atlas of Literacies in Health (GALH).
- Beatrice Avagnina, Managing Director. Consulta Europa, Spain. Co-creation of solutions to improve digital empowerment for active healthy living of citizens in Europe.
This seminar and discussions will be moderated by Sarah Wamala Andersson, Professor of Health and Welfare technology, Mälardalen University, Sweden.
Topic
Policy
Language
English
Seminar type
Live broadcast
Objective of lecture
Tools for implementation
Level of knowledge
Intermediate
Target audience
Management/decision makers
Politicians
Organizational development
Technicians/IT/Developers
Researchers
Care professionals
Healthcare professionals
Patient/user organizations
Keyword
Benefits/effects
Education (verification)
Patient centration
Management
Follow-up/Report of current status
Apps
Patient safety
Government information
Usability
Conference
Vitalis
Lecturers
Beatrice Avagnina Lecturer
Managing Director.
Consulta Europa, Spain.
Managing Director at Consulta Europa Projects & Innovation, a private development agency specialising in innovation and research projects. At Consulta Europa I support the lead of the company’s strategic operations and I supervise the management of our EU awarded projects.
Previously in my career, I provided deep-tech start-ups with innovation services to bring their technologies on the market. I managed teams of project consultants and I was involved in multiple projects of the EU Horizon, Erasmus+, Interreg, and EIC Accelerator as well as due diligence negotiations for start-ups’ equity investments.
In the IDEAHL project (https://ideahl.eu/), represented at the Vitalis conference, Consulta Europa leads the co-creation activities with stakeholders across the 10 project countries to co-design a European Strategy on (digital) health literacy for the benefits of all citizens.
Diana Schack Thoft Lecturer
PhD., Associate Professor and Research manager at the Centre of Health and Applied Technology
University college of Northern Denmark
Kerryn Butler-Henderson Lecturer
PhD., Professor, Director, Digital Health.
RMIT Australia.
Marta Pisano González Lecturer
PhD. Head of Centered Care Service. General Direction of Care and Social Healthcare
Ministry of Health
Marta holds a PhD in Psychology (University of Oviedo), a Degree in Nursing, a Master in Health Sciences (University of Alicante) and a Master in Community Intervention (Complutense University of Madrid). She works in both SESPA and CSA. She is the Coordinator of the School of Patients and the programme PACAS within CSPA and she defines the regional policies regarding the Primary Health Care strategy in SESPA. She is member of the Research Group "Community Health and Active Aging" of the Research Institute of Asturias (IPSA), Member of the B3 Action Group on Integrated Care Action of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing, member of the national multicenter project "Effectiveness of the Otago Exercise Program applied in a group versus individual in the probability of falls of people between 65-80 years not institutionalized ", and scientific coordinator of the European project EFFICHRONIC (Third European Health Programme, 2017-2020) that is based on the implementation of a self-management training programme to address chronic diseases in several countries across Europe.Marta is a member of the coordinating team of the European IDEAHL project (Improuving digital empowerment for active healthy living ) and the Joint Action Care4Diabetes.
Sarah Wamala-Andersson Lecturer
Professor of Health and Welfare technology
Mälardalens University
Dr. Sarah Wamala Andersson currently serves as the Professor of Health and Welfare Technology, at Mälardalen University in Sweden.
Sarah is passionate about inclusive digital transformation, co-design of human-centered technologies, real-word evidence, implementation, equity, ethics, sustainability, collaborations, children´s future career aspirations
Sarah is the founder and leader of Research group: PREVIVE Health and Welfare Technology Research Group, which stands for Policy, Reimbursement, Evidence, Implementation, Value and Effectiveness in Health and Welfare Technology interventions. https://www.mdu.se/en/malardalen-university/research/research-areas/previve
Sarah´s mission is to generate and use evidence to fast-track digital transformation that is effective, inclusive, and sustainable in ways that make lives better especially for those who are excluded in many ways and contribute to socioeconomic development.
Sarah is the principal investigator of several international and national projects related to implementation of digital health solutions and their effectiveness from a user perspective based on co-creation methodologies. Sarah serves on several international expert panels related to new digital technologies and innovations in health and care systems.
Sarah has a multidisciplinary academic training from several international universities (PhD, medical sciences, Karolinska Institutet), Master´s degree (biostatistics/epidemiology) from Stockholm university, Cambridge School of Public Health (UK) and Tufts University (USA) and bachelor’s degree (economics) from Makerere university (Uganda). Sarah has also completed a Post-doc at the University of Otago, Wellington School of Medicine (New Zealand) and the Stanford Executive Program at Stanford Business Graduate School (USA).
Sarah has long multi-professional experiences and has held several scientific and executive management roles in research-driven public organizations and pharmaceutical industry. Sarah has previously the Swedish government as Director General of the Swedish National Institute of Public Health, Professor of Health policy at Karolinska Institutet, and as Principal research scientist at multinational pharmaceutical companies.
Sarah has supervised several PhD and Master students and has published over 70 scientific articles in peer-reviewed international scientific journals, several books, conference papers, reports and public debate articles.
Linkedin profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drsarahwamala/
Matt Richardson Workshop facilitator