This conference will act as a platform to discuss the findings of our new report, Payment by Results: how can payment systems help deliver better care?, and to consider how the NHS can design tariffs and payment models that put patients’ needs first.
This conference identified what good care looks like for people and their families and what challenges and opportunities currently exist to making person-centred, integrated care a reality.
This year, our Annual Conference took a critical look at NHS performance and considered if we are doing enough to meet productivity goals. It focused on how to deliver patient-centred care, and whether our public health and preventative agendas are robust enough to maintain a healthy population now and in the future.
This conference provided an opportunity to reflect on the current health care landscape and the upcoming challenges and opportunities of transforming local health services.
In addition to showcasing best practice in care co-ordination for people with complex chronic conditions and frail older people, this event featured recommendations from our recent continuity of care report.
Featuring Kenneth Kizer and Andrew Lansley MP, our international integrated care summit showcased case studies from home and abroad, and brought together experts in system design, care co-ordination and delivering change.
Organised by The King's Fund and the University Medical Center, Utrecht, our annual event brought together key speakers from around the world to showcase innovations and best practice in the deployment of telehealth and telecare.
Featuring Professor Steve Field and Dana Safran, this conference explored US models of integrated care and provided lessons for NHS commissioners and providers on incentivising integration to improve quality and reduce costs.
This conference explored the proposed information revolution in the NHS and considered how to overcome the technical and cultural challenges to implementing the information strategy.
This event showed how supporting the mental health needs of people with long-term conditions provides better outcomes for patients, quality improvements and productivity gains.
This event looked at how patterns of variations can support health professionals to meet the QIPP challenges of £20 billion efficiency savings by 2014/15.
Our final NHS and public service reform breakfast event offered a timely opportunity to discuss the role of integrated care and how it can address the challenges facing the NHS.
Engaging health and social care in new technologies
This invitation only summit, was jointly run with the Technology Strategy Board, and provided information on the DALLAS programme, looking at approaches to supporting independent living for frail older people and people with long-term conditions.
This major one-day conference brought together experts from the United States and England to consider the practicalities of integrated health and social care.
This evening event examined how and where competition could be applied to bring benefits and how it could be used in a way that enabled greater integration and collaboration.