EIP-AHA and the importance of interoperability for it

European Innovation Partnership
on Active and Healthy Ageing
The Importance of Interoperability
Loukianos Gatzoulis
DG CONNECT H2, European Commission
AAL Interoperability Days, February 19-20 2014
New paradigm of ageing
from
societal challenge burden passive care curing diseases to
major opportunity asset
pro‐active care
improved functioning
Dependency Ratio
Empowerment
•From 1:4 to 1:2
•80+ doubles by 2025
• Active Ageing
• Health literacy
Cost of Care
New Care Models
•Up by 4-8 % of GDP by 2025
•Integrated & Community care
•Large efficiency gains
Human Resources
Growth and Markets
•Shrinking work force
•Lacking 20 mio carers by 2020
•3000 B€ Wealth
•85 Million Consumers
EIP on Active and Healthy Ageing
TARGET : enable citizens to live longer independently in good
health (increasing HLYs by 2 by 2020, QoL, Efficiency gains)
MAIN AREAS:
• Addressing major age-prevalent chronic diseases
• Innovation in prevention, integrated care delivery systems
• Innovation in Active and independent living
APPROACH:
• High-level political commitment, addressing barriers
• Combining demand and supply sides of innovation
• Optimising existing instruments and new ones where
necessary: no new funding
• Ownership by key stakeholders willing to invest
• Large-scale deployment
• Awareness and best-practice sharing across Europe
ec.europa.eu/active-healthy-ageing
European Innovation Partnership on Active & Healthy Ageing
crosscutting, connecting & engaging stakeholders across sectors, from private & public sector
Specific Actions
Improving prescriptions and
adherence to treatment
+2 HLY by 2020
Triple win for Europe
Better management of health:
preventing falls
Pillar I
health &
quality of
life of
European
citizens
Sustainab
le &
efficient
care
systems
growth &
expansion
of EU
industry
Prevention
screening
early
diagnosis
Pillar II
Care &
cure
Pillar III
Independent
living &
active
ageing
Preventing functional decline
& frailty
Integrated care for chronic
conditions, inc. telecare
Interoperable ICT solutions
for independent living &
active ageing
Age-friendly cities and
environments
Building up EIP scale and critical mass
1,000 regions & municipalities
1 billion euro mobilised
30 mio citizens, >2 mio patients
> 500 commitments 3,000 partners & 300 leading organisations
Marketplace
>72,500 visits >1,240 registered users
Participation in the EIP
Research/academia
11%
Advocacy organisations
5%
36%
9%
Health provider
Care provider
9%
Industry ‐ SME
17%
13%
Industry ‐ large
Other
Action Plans with
shared vision
Mapping of
innovative good
practices
Better professional
cooperation: procurement,
standards, guidelines
6 Action Groups
Practical
Toolkits for
replication
Provide input and
expertise through an
open collaboration
Commitments
of the partners
Implementation
on large scale
More integrated,
efficient services
Growth
Evidenced
impact
European Innovation Partnership
'grass roots' models of excellence
Pooling European
Resources and
Expertise
6 Action Groups 3,000 partners & 300 leading organisations
>300 Good Practices
Recognising
Excellence
32 reference sites with evidence‐based innovation
Reaching
Scale
30 million citizens, >2 million patients
Limiting Factors
• Small scale/fragmented evidence of
impact and cost-benefits
• Lacking policy support to care
innovation, Organisational silos
• ICT skills, usability of ICT
• Business models unclear and not
scalable
• Access to financing and investments
• Fragmented legal and regulatory
regimes
• Fragmented markets
••• 9
• Lacking interoperability, standards
••• 9
Why interoperability
and open solutions?
• Better User Acceptance
• Integrated service delivery
• Personalised services
• Better Return of Investment
•
•
•
•
Sharing hard/software infrastructure
Longer depreciation
Flexible adaptation to changing needs
Less risks with multi-vendor solutions
• Better Business Models
• Combining multiple funding sources
• Faster innovation possible
••• 10
••• 10
EC ICT & Ageing
Mobility/
R&D
WIISEL
Falls
UNIVERS
AAL
OASIS
PERSONA
I2HOME
SMILING
>50 M€
iStopfalls
DALLI
MONAMI
MPOWER
SOPRANO
FARSEEI
NG
CONFI
DENCE
ENABLE
EASYLINE
+
HERMES
KSERA
FLOREN
CE
COG
KNOW
ELDER
GAMES
SRS
MOBI
SERV
DIADEM
Open Platforms
and Tools
Roadmaps
Ethics
SENS
ACTIONAAL
VITAL
VITAL
MIND
Cognitive
Support
SENIOR
ADL
Support
AALIANCE
EPAL
RobotERA
COMPANI
ABLE
Advanced
Prototypes
Int. Coop.
CAPSIL
Supporting Measures
USEFIL
Giraf+
SILVER
HOBBIT
ACCOM
PANY
Service &
Social
Robotics
BRAID
••• 11
REAAL Pilot Project
• 5 regions deploying open, multivendor
solutions as basis for independent living
services (5 M€ funding)
• Regions from Denmark, Spain, Norway,
Germany, Italy
• More than 7000 users involved
• Socio-economic measurements of benefits
from interoperability and open solutions
••• 12
Conclusions
• Need to move from proven concept to reality
• Interoperability and open solutions key to
success for EIP-AHA, AAL and H2020
• Mobilising public demand with critical mass is a
must (Public Procurement of Innovation based
on open standards)
• EIP-AHA C2 group play a major role
••• 13
Further Information
• EU ICT and Ageing Well Initiatives
http://ec.europa.eu/einclusion
• ICT Policy Support Programme
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/ict_psp/index_en.htm
• Ambient Assisted Living
Joint Programme
http://www.aal-europe.eu/
• JPI - More Years – Better Lives
http://www.jp-demographic.eu
• Active and Healthy Ageing Partnership
http://ec.europa.eu/active-healthy-ageing
• Contact:
peter.wintlev-jensen (at) ec.europa.eu