This time in '99: UK hospitals get £20m IT boost

In our "This time in '99" series, we take a daily look back at the agenda-setting stories as they were 12 months ago. We'll also cast an eye over the most influential news "This week in '99" every Friday in the video news bulletin

By Suzanna Kerridge, 22 March 2000 15:05

NEWS During this week in 2000 the press is full of Brown's budget talk. We look back exactly one year ago today...
This is how the original story broke on 23 March, 1999: Frontline health services in the UK have been given a £20m bonus to spend on technology. Health minister John Denham says primary care services, such as hospitals and GPs, will be given £20,000 each to spend on IT. Speaking at the Health Services Management Conference in Harrogate, he said the money will be used to fund development of NHSNet and buy a range of equipment for tracking healthcare costs. He added the money would also enable GPs to keep track of patients' records at the touch of a button. Every UK authority is to be given £20,000 and the remaining money will be directed to previously under-funded areas. But Dr Neil Bacon, medical director at online health service doctors.net.uk, claimed the money could be better spent. "It's a good idea to try and harness the power of modern technology but I share the concern with many of my colleagues that NHSNet is not the way to do it," he said. Bacon claimed NHSNet - an intranet for medical data - is expensive, clumsy and "doesn't offer any interesting information". He added: "All the doctors can get better information on the Internet for free. There is no clinical focus in the information to help patients or doctors. Throwing money at NHSNet does not make it better as there are few clinicians at the top level of the NHS who understand how doctors use IT in day-to-day life."

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