Predictions 2022

Previsões

The future awakens

Life Sciences and Health Care Predictions 2022

November 2017

O ano é 2022. O eu quantificado está vivo e de boa-saúde, as tecnologias digitais transformaram a cultura da prestação de cuidados de saúde e os novos players romperam com os modelos de prestação de cuidados. Este estudo do Deloitte Uk’s Center for Health Solutions dá-nos algumas previsões que, se forem realidade, agitarão a industria das life sciences and health care nos próximos cinco anos.

Este relatório da Deloitte Center for Health Solutions baseia-se no seu estudo de 2014 Healthcare and Life Sciences Predictions 2020: A bold future? Três anos depois, o ritmo e a escala de inovação significam que algumas dessas previsões já são, ao dia de hoje, uma realidade, enquanto algumas ainda estão longe e outras talvez nunca aconteçam.


Este novo estudo avalia tendências em 2017 e dá-nos seis novas previsões sobre o que as Life Sciences e o ecossistema dos cuidados da saúde podem parecer em 2022 e as principais restrições que precisarão de ser superadas.

Healthcare and Life Sciences Predictions 2022: The future awakens

The six predictions for 2022

1. The quantified self is alive and well
The genome generation is more informed and engaged in managing their own health

In 2022, individuals are better informed about their genetic profile, the diseases they have or might develop, and the effectiveness of health interventions. The ‘quantified self’ has embraced prevention and is devoting time, energy and money to staying healthy, including using regulated and validated health apps and wearables. Patients are true consumers; they understand they have options and use information and data about themselves and providers to get the best treatment at a time, place and cost convenient to them.

2. The culture in health care is transformed by digital technologies
Smart health care is delivering more cost-effective patient-centred care

By 2022, demographic and economic changes, increased patient expectations and advanced digital and cognitive technologies have disrupted health care worldwide. Clinical roles have been optimised, and staff use cognitive technologies to deliver more seamless, integrated care designed around patient needs and patients control access to their health data. The digital hospital leverages technologies to optimise care delivery, patient experience, staff deployment and the management of back-office services, reducing costs and improving outcomes.

3. The life sciences industry is industrialised
Advanced cognitive technologies have improved the productivity, speed and compliance of core processes

In 2022, pharma uses a lean operating model to generate funding for R&D and deliver more cost-effective medical innovations. The ’industrialisation’ of pharma has led to predictable productivity increases across its functions and geographies. Companies have moved through three phases of evolution and are now deploying artificial intelligence and machine learning to increase the pace and productivity further still. The traditional focus of industrialising finance and operations has been extended to compliance, commercial, development and discovery.

4. Data is the new health care currency
Artificial intelligence and real-world evidence are unlocking value in health data

In 2022, health care data is a national infrastructure priority and critical business asset, attracting significant funding. Real-world data (RWD) is providing the information needed to enable researchers to develop more precision medicine and clinicians to predict patients’ response to treatments, improving outcomes and health care productivity. Pharmaceutical companies collaborate fully with patients and health care systems, using data to develop better treatments, launch them faster and price them according to improvement in health outcomes.

5. The future of medicine is here and now
Exponential advances in life-extending and precision therapies are improving outcomes

By 2022, medicine is fully Predictive, Preventative (based on predictive risk), Personalised and Participatory (P4 Medicine). Insights from human genetics, precision and personalised medicine has transformed health care, bringing value through innovative biotechnology. Artificial intelligence has revolutionised health care through mining medical records, designing treatment plans, speeding up medical imaging and drug creation.

6. New entrants are disrupting health care
The boundaries between stakeholders have become increasingly blurred

In 2022, the health care landscape has changed significantly, with non-traditional health care players using their brand, engineering expertise and knowledge of customers to disrupt the health care landscape. These new entrants have partnered with traditional providers to deliver a more customer focussed, experience of health care. New partnerships and collaborations at both global and local level have blurred the boundaries between providers and new entrants, including supermarket chains, technology giants and life sciences companies.

The key enablers to thrive and survive the future

  • Wide-scale adoption of new digital and cognitive health technologies
    The life sciences and health care industries have traditionally been slow to use data and analytics due to multiple disconnected systems, poor data quality and patient and provider behaviours that have been difficult to change. However, we are now at a tipping point in advanced technology adoption towards an outcomes-based, patient-centric care model.
  • Recruitment and retention of new skills and talent
    The delivery of efficient and effective services requires organisations to have access to appropriate specialist and generalist skills and talent, including digital and analytical skills. How the health care industry responds in relation to recruitment and retention of the right talent and skills will determine how well these predictions are realised.
  • A new approach to regulation
    For the past decade, most life sciences and health care companies have highlighted that a risk-averse approach to regulation has impeded adoption of innovation. The evidence today and predictions for tomorrow illustrate that this is changing.
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