5. Joint Working
ABPI states: “Joint Working describes situations
where, for the benefit of patients, NHS and industry
organisations pool skills, experience and/or
resources for the joint development and
implementation of patient-centred projects and
share a commitment to successful delivery”.
12. Joint Working Case Study
Outcomes in diabetes can already be
measured using routinely collected
data. However, to break outcomes
down by therapy, we need to capture
a new dataset.
This joint working project will give us
unprecedented insight into outcomes
in diabetes as we will have access to
data that spans primary and
secondary care.
We will be able to retrospectively
compare outcomes by therapy in a
robust and credible manner and also
form cohorts based on therapy. for
prospective study before publishing
the findings in a reputable journal.
Cohort 1
£400kk £450k £512kk
Cohort 2
£360kk £406k £440k
Outcomes in Diabetes
Secure patient consent
Identify and track cohorts by
therapy
Determine outcomes and cost
them
Publish and communicate
findings
13. Not designed with sales in mind
Damages company brand
‘White elephant’
Bad Joint Working
14. Clear, quantified benefits to all sides
All stakeholders engaged in development process
Foundation for long-term partnership
Good Joint Working