10 Break-Out Sessions
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For the 49th St Gallen Symposium we have introduced our new format – the Interactive Sessions – to foster more interaction and ideation space among our participants. Each session focussed on a central issue related to this year’s symposium topic “Capital for Purpose” to develop solutions within a short time. In a specific design thinking setting our participants produced different approaches to solve the challenge they had been facing.
We have prepared the completed results of four Interactive Sessions to give you some insights. Each of the concept posters consists of a solution to the issue or a way to foster and enable impact. After seeing several of our communities’ outstanding ideas coming into action in the last years, we look forward to inspiring many more in the future. Become part of this initiative by sharing your brilliant ideas.
Driven by the need of supporting patients to access top-notch medical information and optimal access healthcare providers regardless to where patients are located.
They advocate the view of missing sufficient access to opinions of trusted experts – digital or face to face – for their personal case, no matter of their location.
They suggested to address this issue by setting-up a multi-sided platform, which should Empower patients in finding better decisions, as they seem to lack confidence in recommended therapies & core decisions made by their respective doctors or other health consultants. motivation.
Addressing the seemingly low adoption rate of new technologies within the public health sector. Their Universal EHR Plus (Electronic Health Record) concept promised to change that by building up the digital base, which is essential for future improvements. Running on a central system, either enabled by government bodies or other players, the platform would act as the single source of truth for the patient, medical associations, providers but also insures – if granted access by the patient.
Establishing an obligatory top-down framework of data sharing for all patients within an economy by governmental bodies, through an approach that builds on gamification & education. The chance to leverage big data sets of one specific data set & user group for scientific reasons will maximize the healthcare benefits for society, whereas the individual patient still get the possibility of opting out (cf. similar laws/practices for organ donation).