Project impacts

Economic benefits

The economic benefits of improved patient outcomes from better eObs patient observation system is hard to quantify as it has further wide-reaching outcomes from mental health to productivity and reduced need for further intervention. Immediate benefits will be reduced staff time and reduced human error compared with manual administration. Just a small improvement in patient outcomes will save the NHS £millions and improve morbidity and mortality rates.

Adopting an open software approach will eliminate prohibitive annual software licensing and adaptation costs while delivering a flexible public asset that can readily be adapted to individual NHS trust needs. Re-using software across the sector will improve the quality of the software whilst reducing costs of isolated trial and error projects. This is critical as continued capital expenditure on repeating infrastructure work that could be solved once and reused is a major limiting factor in the expansion of health technology into more advanced areas such as AI and data analytics.

Governmental priorities

This project aligns with priorities for improving productivity, increasing digital skills, using open source and open standards. It's aligned with NHS priorities for paperless wards by 2023 and improvement of services and costs reduction (fullfact.org: Spending on the NHS in England). The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care states: 'it is an immediate priority of mine to sort out the technology of the NHS and social care systems' (Matt Hancock's speech at NHS Expo 2018) and the £7billion per year spent on enterprise licences (research published by TechMarketView) is unsustainable.

Environmental impacts

An effective electronic patient observation system will directly eliminate current paper-based record keeping systems. Better patient outcomes and reduced secondary interventions will reduce patient travel to appointments with big CO2 savings.

Regional impacts

Local skills are utilised to support an implementation. With proprietary software, only the originator can usually make changes - often exporting work abroad. With open source, there are more opportunities for skills to be developed and employed locally to improve the application and its operations.

Societal impacts

Improved health and safety and quality of life resulting from better patient outcomes due to improved care practices as a direct consequence of better patient monitoring processes. Recording observations on paper charts is fraught with challenges and prone to errors. Electronic charting systems will make it easier to spot and act on patient deterioration. Timely observations have been linked to appropriate escalation and reduction in cardiac arrests.