Neil Mesher

Neil Mesher is the CEO of Philips UK and Ireland

What digitisation can do for us

Safeguarding the future of the NHS is no easy task. With greater financial pressures and an ageing population, assessing how the health service is equipped to navigate the challenges it faces continues to be a subject of intense scrutiny. Digital technology holds the key to overcoming many of these hurdles, and has the potential to revolutionise the way the NHS operates, equipping the service for an increasingly digital future. From the way patients engage with services at the point of use, to improving the efficiency and co-ordination of care, to empowering people to manage their own health and wellbeing, technology can enable the NHS to usher in a new era of personalised care and, ultimately, help us to live longer and healthier lives.

Technology at the heart: The dawn of a new NHS

As we reach the milestone 70th anniversary of the NHS, it’s an opportunity to celebrate the fact that, thanks to our health system, we can all expect to live longer, healthier lives. In 70 years, the NHS has transformed the wellbeing of the nation: delivering medical advances and revolutionary treatments to improve public health, and is considered by many to be the envy of the world. But, with greater financial pressures and an ageing and increasing population, the NHS model of old continues to be tested, with many questioning the long-term stability of the tax-payer funded service.

Speeding up cancer diagnosis: what’s not to like?

Cancer is a momentous issue globally, affecting more than 14 million lives each year and accounting for approximately 15 per cent of all deaths [1]. Here in the UK, somebody dies from cancer every four minutes [2]. As people age, their risk of living with multiple healthcare conditions also increases — half of all cancer cases in the UK each year are diagnosed in people aged 70 or over [3]. This makes the management of the elderly patient population an important consideration within the design of cancer services. We are fortunate to have support in place to help us fight this disease through routine NHS screening, healthy living support and access to treatments.