Skip to main content

https://healthtech.blog.gov.uk/2019/06/24/nhsx-giving-patients-and-staff-the-technology-they-need/

NHSX: giving patients and staff the technology they need

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Digital services, Skills and culture
Six female NHS staff stand with Matthew Gould in a meeting room
Matthew Gould meets staff from Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge

NHSX has just completed a major review of NHS tech spending. We went through all of the centrally funded tech programmes because we wanted to answer 3 big questions:

  1. what are our priorities for technology in the NHS?
  2. how can we make sure that what we do is aligned with the tech vision and the NHS Long Term Plan?
  3. how do we live within our means?  

Our priorities

NHSX exists to give patients and staff the technology they need. That’s our mission, but what are those user needs?  As I've travelled round lots of different parts of the NHS in the past few weeks, clear patterns emerge.

Number one is the need for interoperability. Too many NHS systems can’t talk to each other. It could be a blood test taken in one part of the NHS that can’t be viewed in another, a GP’s system that doesn’t update when a hospital switches a patient’s medication, a mental health crisis team who have no idea the patient also has a heart condition.

Our siloed systems put patient safety at risk because clinicians end up treating patients without the full information. They stifle innovation because developers can’t build on them.

We also know that too many clinicians are frustrated by clunky tech getting in the way of their ability to do their job.  Across the country, doctors, nurses, dentists, social workers and others - all stretched and time-poor - are wasting huge amounts of time on painfully slow log- ins, fighting with old kit, or having to remember dozens of different passwords over the course of their day.   

For patients too, especially those who deal a lot with the NHS, a better digital experience can make life easier. People who are used to dealing with their bank by app can’t understand why their hospital insists on sending test results by post.   

So with all that in mind, these are the top delivery missions we’ve agreed for NHSX:    

  • reducing the burden on clinicians and staff, so they can focus on patients
  • giving people the tools to access information and services directly
  • ensuring clinical information can be safely accessed, wherever it is needed
  • aiding the improvement of patient safety across the NHS
  • improving NHS productivity with digital technology

Our plan

First, we’re going to focus on standards and platforms, keeping the centre as ‘thin’ as possible. This is how the internet works and it’s the only way we will ever be able to be able to transform an organisation as large as the NHS.

Standards are the common technical and semantic rules that everyone agrees on in order to participate in a system. Plug sockets are a standard, URLs for web pages are a standard. In the NHS standards are essential for delivering interoperability, so essential diagnostic information gets to where it’s needed. Standards also mean we can more easily ‘plug in’ new digital services once they’ve been invented.

But we don’t want to build many digital services ourselves. There are plenty of clinicians, charities, start-ups and NHS trusts that can do a much better job of designing new services than we can at the centre. Instead, as I’ve previously blogged, we will focus on creating platforms that other innovators can build on.

An app that tracks your blood sugar or supports your mental health, for example, could take you to an in-app GP booking service, using the booking platform we’re going to build.

To make it all happen, we need to help the whole NHS to become more digitally capable. It’s no good dreaming up grand digital projects from the centre if hospitals and GP surgeries don’t have the equipment, the skills or the capacity to see those plans through.

So we need to put a large part of our effort and resources to helping the system get the capability it needs. And not just on the medical side - our efforts in this space will focus as well on the social care system, where digital capability is mixed.

Our programmes

So what does this all mean in practice?

Going into this review the NHS centrally ran about 30 different digital transformation programmes. Some of these began years ago and this exercise has been an opportunity to review them, cut down on unnecessary duplication, incorporate new technology, move some programmes to live services and bring teams closer together.

The result of all this is that we now have 10 major transformation pieces of work:   

  1. NHS app and citizen ID
  2. digital child health and maternity
  3. integrating community providers (including pharmacists, optometrists, dentists and ambulances)
  4. screening
  5. booking, referrals and appointments management
  6. standards (including medication standards)
  7. primary care
  8. urgent and emergency care
  9. social care
  10. local capability (including LHCR, HSLI, GDEs and Carter money)

Programmes that support interoperability and the joining up of data across population and place, like the Local Health and Care Records Exemplars, will continue. So too will the Global Digital Exemplar programme supporting 26 acute, mental health and ambulance trusts, but with more emphasis on the parts of the NHS that need most help. The NHS Digital Academy supporting current and future Chief Clinical Information Officers and Chief Information Officers will also continue.

Some of our programmes are closing. This is either because they have delivered on their objectives and are being moved to live services, or because we want them to become a mainstream part of the way we design and deliver digital services in the NHS, not just a discrete project. Accessibility and digital inclusion, for example, should be something that all our teams think about.

Programmes that are being closed include:

  • NHS Wifi, which was successfully delivered in March 2019
  • Access to Service Information: which is moving to live on the basis that the team will deliver a Directory of Services that will function as a canonical data register, as well as a bookings and referrals management system
  • Digitising Community Pharmacy: which is completing the Electronic Prescription Service and moving to live
  • Medicines Data and Integrating Pharmacy Across Care Settings: these programmes are stopping. Their aims will be incorporated into our work on interoperability, as well as a specific piece of work on linking pharmacists, optometrists and dentists into mainstream NHS processes   

The Widening Digital Participation project has come to its planned end and will be incorporated into the wider work of NHSX.

There is more spending to look at and we will never stop trying to find ways of smarter working. We’re not done yet. For now though this process has been a hugely valuable exercise, bringing together the entire tech leadership of the NHS to thrash out agreement in exactly the way that NHSX was designed to do.

I’m very grateful to everyone who took part. Now we have to deliver.

Sharing and comments

Share this page

2 comments

  1. Comment by Dylan Roberts posted on

    Great start.

    As a comment - a lot of these are about applying information and technology to automate the current system and services. Health policy is more aligned to taking a whole system approach (which includes a lot more people than work in the NHS or Local Gov) across places with consideration for prevention is better than cure which is a lot about people's well being than just health.

    Also there are more carers working outside of the NHS and Local Government than in - how will we underpin new multidisciplinary (including non NHS staff) teams considering the needs of one person addressed by people acting as one team, from organisations behaving as one system?

    I appreciate that you are still in your discovery phase - so I hope this is still up for review.

    My list would be:

    NHS app and citizen ID
    digital child health and maternity
    Local Government integrating community providers (including social care, THIRD SECTOR, INDEPENDENT ORGS, pharmacists, optometrists, dentists and ambulances)
    screening
    booking, referrals and appointments management
    standards (including medication standards)
    primary care
    urgent and emergency care
    social care (change to Local Government Services - including Public Health and population health management)
    local capability (including LHCR, HSLI, GDEs and Carter money)

    Reply
  2. Comment by Phil Barrett posted on

    Great to read this from NHSX. We've reflected on your post with some views and an offer of support in this important work, in our related response.

    https://ripple.foundation/2019/06/a-change-is-coming-lets-make-it-open/

    Reply

Leave a reply to Phil Barrett

Cancel reply

We only ask for your email address so we know you're a real person

By submitting a comment you understand it may be published on this public website. Please read our privacy notice to see how the GOV.UK blogging platform handles your information.