2. 2008 - OECD countries spent nearly $2.8trn on healthcare services
US = $1.1trn, UK = $160bn.
2009 projections were that in 2020 - OECD countries = $10trn pa,
US = 21% of its GDP, Rest of the OECD countries = 16% GDP (average).
Reality 2009-2011 annual growth only 0.2% (OECD avg)
% GDP spent on
health
Why Health + care
3. Measuring patient outcomes is going to be critical
and requires new ways of doing business
so cash is tight....................................
4. Current healthcare models are unsustainable –
delivering efficiency and effectiveness will be the
major driver
Health and care cannot be delivered in isolation –
collaboration between Healthcare providers,
Governments, patients and industry working together
to assess and measure outcomes.
5. SMIP
Stratified Medicine Assisted living
Regenmed
and
Cell Therapy
Biomedical
Catalyst
SBRI
Health + care activities
Cell
Therapy
Catapult
Precision
Medicine
Catapult
6. SMIP
Stratified medicine
(data integration/adoption)
Independent living
(interoperability)
Regenmed
and
Cell Therapy
(manufacture/
Regulation)
Biomedical
Catalyst
SBRI
Health + Care opportunities
AMR?
Biomedical
Catalyst
SBRI
Healthier lives
Prevention
Monitoring?
Antimicrobial
Resistance
Dementia?
Cell
Therapy
Catapult
Precision
Medicine
Catapult
7. Health + care business models
Business to Business
NHS social care
interventions
Intermediary
Community Services
Business to Customer
Prevention Wellness
and self management
Informal Care
systems
Editor's Notes
1
Average annual growth has been 4% per annum for previous 10 years 1998-2008
2009-11
UK decline of -0.5-2%
US avg 2% growth
Health-care spending in China will almost triple to $1 trillion annually by 2020 driven by an aging population and government efforts to broaden insurance coverage, according to a McKinsey & Co. report.
China will spend more on drugs, medical devices and hospital treatments as it lifts spending to 7 percent of gross domestic product, from 5.5 percent, or $350 billion, in 2010, McKinsey said yesterday. This will make it the biggest market globally by 2020 after the U.S., which in 2009 spent $2.5 trillion, or 17.6 percent of its GDP, on health care, said the consulting company.
“This will be a key priority for China in the coming years. The government is trying to promote social harmony, and closing the gap on health care is a big part of this,” Franck Le Deu, a Shanghai-based McKinsey partner, said in an interview. “This is a market that is still extremely early in the stage of development,” he said by telephone.
China’s government raised its own spending on health care to 737.9 billion yuan ($116 billion) in 2011, up from 359.4 billion yuan in 2008, the Ministry of Health said in an Aug. 17 statement. It raised medical insurance coverage to more than 95 percent of the population and added diseases including lung and gastric cancer to an insured list, the ministry said.
51% more people aged 65 and over in England1 in 2030 compared to
2010
101% more people aged 85 and over in England in 2030 compared to
20102
10.7 million people in Great Britain can currently expect inadequate
retirement incomes3
over 50% more people with three or more long-term conditions in
England by 2018 compared to 20084
over 80% more people aged 65 and over with dementia (moderate or
severe cognitive impairment) in England and Wales by 2030 compared to
2010.5