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Anath Hojman

MA 2024
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About

I am Anath, a service designer, strategist, and design researcher based in London.


Throughout my career, I have worked in both consultancy and start-up environments, helping organisations conceive and implement innovative services, experiences, and processes through human-centred design.


My practice is driven by curiosity and a deep interest in understanding and exploring better ways to build relationships—whether between humans, with the environment, or within the systems we inhabit.


During my time at the RCA, I focused on social impact and systems-oriented design, engaging in projects related to food insecurity, sustainable development, and healthcare.

Final Project

Our project focused on care-at-home services (also known as virtual wards), an emerging and rapidly growing NHS initiative where hospital-level care is delivered in the patient's home. This approach offers several potential benefits to patients, families, staff, and health systems, and yet it also introduces significant challenges in terms of clarity, cohesion, and trust-building.



We approached this project by examining these services on two different levels. Firstly, we conducted a systemic analysis to understand barriers and enablers to effective care-at-home services across the UK. Secondly, we contributed to the transformation of a virtual ward service within a specific organisation, DHU Healthcare.

At both levels, our design interventions centred on facilitating new forms of conversation between key stakeholders.


At the systemic level, we established a new space for conversations: a working group involving multiple organisations within the NHS, facilitating the exchange of learning, insights, and perspectives on the challenges of providing patient-centric care in this new context.


With DHU, our research revealed that the service was undersubscribed due to a lack of confidence and clarity among referring clinicians. As a response to this insight, we restructured the conversations where DHU first introduces and explains the service to their community partners. Specifically, we developed a toolkit that helps foster empathy through storytelling, clarity through journey visualisation, and engagement through interactivity and built-in feedback mechanisms. Overall, the conversation toolkit allows referring clinicians to better understand the service and its benefits, increasing their likelihood of placing referrals when they encounter an appropriate patient.

WIP project 2022

FINAL PROJECT PROPOSAL