 Thank you Graham. I'm not I'm not sure I'm the right place. I'm a surgeon and As hearing of the also the speakers today, I probably should have prepared another presentation than I have but I'm going to stick with it Somebody out there tells me that then like it's leading the way in digital care there's been reports and articles claiming that and there's a There's some truth on it and a lot of hype So I'll just shortly saying what's the real stuff and what's the hype? There's there's something Gone in in the past. That's the the documented effect out in the GP practice all around Denmark And that we have a health portal which have been around for Seven years now and then there's the future which I'm going to talk about and and the thing in between is telemedicine telemedicine is going to Save Denmark if you ask the political politicians it's going to almost took care of all the elderly and There's some truth in it, but it's not it's that's a lot of hype and some of the architects articles you saw was the hype and The focus on the work in Denmark since 96 have been on supporting the work processes at GP offices. We've been very good at building systems Mainly based on smaller come from smaller companies Implementing EDI standards communicating to the surrounding facilities and This is the the brag slide saying that we have a hundred percent coverage every GP has a IT system and is using it very heavily, but it's all based on Messaging they are sending messages to each other in huge amount and So so one of the things we learn by these success and since 1926 is that by sending all these data We're creating a lot of copies of data And if you ask a GP in Denmark who has the latest copy of the data Which data kind of trust and and who should I send a copy to he'll be blank He wouldn't be able to answer So in spite of having a hundred percent coverage of IT system at the GP offices We haven't solved the problem with having an answer on What is the patient actually taking as medicine and in the technical space? We have a lot of interfaces We have as we say back home a spaghetti architecture So we want to get from one place to another This is the situation as is down a lot of end-to-end integrations a lot of messaging is going from one place to another a lot of copies and To a future model which we have started off by building a national service platform and I'm sorry to say I would like to say that that We have planned it to be like this, but we we just came about building it as open source So that's why is it the right conference? I might like speaker, but All of the things we built in the new way is open source and That's quite interesting What kind of questions you then can get when you talk to the industry in Denmark? So then the model is instead of getting all these point-to-point messaging we want to share information through a service platform which take care of all the Boris stuff the integrations there this security the privacy and the indexing and on top of that we build the shared Repositories and one of the first of them is the For sharing medication of information so we try to create interoperability by a common open Infra national ita in architecture by using open standards and To some extent open data sets, but there we still have a way to go So the green parts we built we are on the way of implementing and I will the rest of a present day is is going to Go on why we built just this service firstly In short the shared medication record with which is going to be the empowerment tool for the patient It's actually we have a central service a service provider giving access to online and Medication data of the individual patient. This is a Transport by a dedicated network and is consumed at the end from the local EHR system medication modules out in the clinics that's a learning point from the health portal to now is that Just building a portal Giving it to clinicians having ten minutes of time together with the patients having to go over to another Another site logging in finding the patient. They don't that's not in in line with their work So they had to be integrated in the local system. So the service they're looking at shared data from within their own system That's the new thing in that there's 38 Ways of communicating medication in Denmark that we used to be and we're trying to get it down to one That's a hard business and one of the Big areas where we were surprised. We had to work was to get these people Understanding each other's languages. We thought they want gone to the same medical school But when you go to become a GP you speak a certain way when you're a hospital you speak another way So some of the issues we got have solved and why is getting these people to understand the same things around medication so instead of sending data we are trying to share data and That's of course because there's a lot of mistakes going on a lot of errors in Medication, it's it's good that the the human body is so robust if if If you count the number of mistakes going on around medication, you'll be surprised It's more dangerous to go to a hospital than take an airplane. That's for certain So the background is reducing errors Better communication between citizens and professionals and in between professionals and one key I'll skip this one You probably can't read what's one, but since the beginning of the health portal in 2004 it's been a key issue for us to when we provide a new service We provide a service both for the patient and for professionals so this shared medication record is shared between the professional and with the patient so the patient can look up who's looked at my record So there's a log I can see I can go on online now and look up my shared medication record and see Who's which doctor has looked up and then okay? I don't know that's guy Why have you been looking at my data? So now we got the service we got it on the way of implementing it understanding all the Sure, and we only need to implement it. Thank you