ORCHA’s founding CEO presented at the United Nations yesterday
Liz Ashall-Payne, founding CEO of ORCHA, presented yesterday at a United Nations symposium on digital health.
The invite-only conference, which is billed an ‘intellectual supercollider’, was streamed by UNESCO to 150 countries.
Liz’s presentation outlined ORCHA’s work in the field of digital health accreditation and focused on its development, with the Nordic Interoperability Project/ N!P, of the world’s first cross-border digital health evaluation programme.
She said:
“I briefed the delegates on a cross-border project which ORCHA supported across the Nordics. I believe there are lessons here which could be relevant as we roll out safe digital health across the globe.”
The Nordic region, which encompasses Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Iceland, has a transient population, so it makes sense for these separate nations to integrate their health systems so that citizens are supported on the move. Despite the 365,000 digital health technologies on the market, no standardised regulation or risk management system is in place in any of the Nordic states, let alone any shared standards between the countries.
The Nordic Digital Health and Evaluation Criteria (NordDEC) programme has been created by N!P together with ORCHA to unify digital health standards across multiple countries, so that safe digital health can reach citizens across the entire region.
Liz said that lessons learned from the NordDEC could now be rolled out globally – bringing countries, regions and continents together in a joint effort to get better healthcare to more people.
She added:
“The invitation to speak at this great event came via Martin Curley of Ireland’s Health Service Executive, after our meeting earlier this year. Thank you Martin for giving ORCHA this opportunity.”