NHS staff in Scotland believe technology is key to the future of healthcare – with big data and analytics, digital apps and remote monitoring coming top in an innovation survey.

Responding to an independent poll commissioned by NHS partner InnoScot Health, healthcare workers believe these represent key focus areas for improving the health service.

Scotland’s Chief Scientist for Health, Professor Dame Anna Dominiczak, says the response shows that staff are “keen to help identify, develop, and pioneer their integration.”

Eighty eight per cent of staff ranked big data and analytics – using gathered data to uncover hidden patterns and correlations for better decision-making and greater efficiency in healthcare delivery – as one of the most important areas for NHS Scotland innovation in the future.

Also ranking 88 per cent for the workforce were digital apps – delivering information for patients, care providers and researchers, real-time patient monitoring, collecting community and clinical health data, and more.

Remote monitoring – a method of healthcare delivery that uses the latest advances in information technology to gather patient data outside of traditional healthcare settings – sits close behind at 86 per cent.

Commanding the same percentage in the survey is the advancement of now well-established telemedicine – technology enabling video or phone appointments between a patient and their healthcare practitioner.

The results provide a snapshot of health and social care staff views. They were gathered via online questionnaire and the data collected between 3 October and 4 November 2022 with a total of 602 eligible responses received.

The survey discovered that NHS workers with 11 to 20 years’ experience are most likely (93 per cent) to believe that remote monitoring should be a focus for the future, the survey found.

Furthermore, those in the Health Science Services Staff Group category are most likely (89 per cent) to believe that ‘artificial intelligence’ – the application of machine learning (ML) algorithms and other cognitive technologies in medical settings – should be an important focus for the future.

The same survey previously revealed that nine out of 10 survey respondents believe innovation must be at the heart of improving NHS Scotland services and helping to tackle pandemic backlogs.  

Almost two thirds (64 per cent) of NHS staff consider themselves to be a healthcare innovator and have ideas to improve the NHS, currently facing one of its most difficult periods. One in six respondents specifically believe this is the case “to a great extent.”

Professor Dame Anna Dominiczak said: “NHS staff are very much aware of the latest innovation possibilities for healthcare improvement and, not only that, they are extremely keen to help identify, develop, and pioneer their integration.

“This survey shows that there is an undoubted appetite for innovation-led change – from the ever more detailed picture that ethical big data and analytics can offer, to the reassurance that digital apps and remote monitoring can provide to both patients and NHS staff.

“The NHS Scotland workforce evidently agrees that working smarter – using innovation to achieve more with less – is an important way to reduce waiting lists and improve patient outcomes.

“Staff also believe that the more comprehensive picture of a patient’s health which they can build up, the better. 

“They recognise that this could offer a gateway to a more proactive approach to healthcare, including the ability to spot and predict potential issues early and treat them, in turn saving time and precious NHS resources.

“In other words, the message is clear – when a leading culture of innovation and deep workforce insight are brought together, they become powerful facilitators for an improved NHS Scotland.”

Graham Watson, executive chair of InnoScot Health, said: “Our survey is a timely snapshot of where NHS Scotland currently stands during one of its most difficult periods.

“It provides ample evidence of an innovation-ready workforce that wants to be part of improving services for both patients and staff, including the opportunity to use their own insight and ideas to drive forward change.

“The potential is vast, whether it is reducing current challenges, empowering patients to manage their own healthcare journey, or gaining important insights for new possibilities in diagnoses.”