Community volunteering goes digital to save lives and protect the NHS


News provided by Science & Engineering Applications Ltd on Thursday 18th Mar 2021



SCIENAP launches CHAI Community app

A year after the first lockdown, Age UK have just launched an urgent appeal for everyone to check that older people are eating enough, following a report raising concern that “undernutrition and malnourishment in older people is increasing at pace” due to the pandemic. This is despite stories of too many volunteers, and the heartwarming stories about an “army” of NHS volunteers and “thousands” of spontaneously created mutual aid groups. Digital technology is urgently needed to improve the effectiveness of volunteers and save more lives.

Poor nutrition is just one example as a long term health crisis unfolds due to the pandemic. The NHS is responding to increased demand by embracing the advantages of digital technology to reach more patients. Home monitoring will soon become the new norm for many. The challenge will be finding those people most in need of help and if necessary helping them to track their condition at home to ensure they are not left behind.

Discovering unmet needs of vulnerable people is not easy and it requires a proactive rather than a reactive strategy, demonstrated only too well last year by the failure of the NHS volunteer app to attract calls for help. Vulnerable people don’t ask for help because it is very frightening to acknowledge being vulnerable, it’s embarrassing, they don’t know what help is available, how to ask for it or if it is safe. Local community and mutual aid groups, working proactively based on local knowledge, have more success:

“many vulnerable people would simply not survive this crisis without the work that is being done ... by mutual aid groups”, research by New Local Government Network, July 2020.

Maintaining this level of support, and helping more vulnerable people, is a big ask of anyone and volunteers need professional digital tools specifically designed for the job, removing reliance on WhatsApp and Facebook chat.

SCIENAP has launched a new app (CHAI® Community) that brings the power of transformative digital healthcare technology into the community, designed specifically for volunteers, friends, family, neighbours and carers. The app helps untrained operators manage familiar tasks like shopping, pharmacy collections and dog walking; whilst guiding them as a team to proactively provide invaluable and much needed additional services:

  • Establish who is vulnerable (with simple prompts) and assess their non-clinical unmet needs;
  • Encourage and support self care where possible (protecting the NHS);
  • Digitally and securely collaborate with friends, neighbours, family and carers (it’s a team effort);
  • Support professional services to perform effective triaging by helping patients track symptoms at home.

Sponsoring organisations (eg. local authorities) can provide in-app advice and signposts to local support and analyze local statistics to plan future services.

SCIENAP’s founder & CEO, James Ingram, says “The NHS has commissioned us to add a Long Covid symptom tracker to CHAI Community to ensure that those without the ability to self-report their condition are not disadvantaged by digital exclusion. This highlights the urgent need and value that volunteers can bring at this time of crisis. Nobody should be left behind.”

About Science & Engineering Applications Ltd (SCIENAP)

SCIENAP works with the NHS, Social Services and volunteer groups producing specialist healthcare and wellbeing apps. After developing CHAI Professional, a nursing app for acute care, when Covid arrived they began the development of CHAI Community for untrained users in the community. Both apps contain similar functionality (e.g. tasks, alerts, notes, observation records and symptom trackers) but acute care is replaced with tools to help manage chronic conditions in the community. It is possible to share information between the apps and SCIENAP is looking to apply this to scenarios such as patient discharge from hospital where volunteers can work hand in hand with nurses to help reduce delayed patient discharge (a major concern). CHAI has been developed in partnership with the NHS with funding from Innovate UK (SBRI).

SCIENAP is passionate about empowering individuals to securely share their community record with whoever they trust to help them (NHS, Social Services, paramedics, volunteers, family and friends). CHAI is a registered trademark of Science & Engineering Applications Ltd.

Contact Details:
info@scienap.com
https://scienap.com & https://chaicommunity.com
https://twitter.com/chai_community

Press release distributed by Pressat on behalf of Science & Engineering Applications Ltd, on Thursday 18 March, 2021. For more information subscribe and follow https://pressat.co.uk/


CHAI Long Covid Community Groups Wellbeing Mutual Aid Volunteer Patient Vulnerable Health Tech Age UK Symptoms Chronic Conditions NHS Old Charities & non-profits Consumer Technology Coronavirus (COVID-19) Food & Drink Government Health Medical & Pharmaceutical Public Sector & Legal
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Science & Engineering Applications Ltd

Science & Engineering Applications Ltd
press@scienap.com
https://scienap.com/

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Community volunteering goes digital to save lives and protect the NHS

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