Plans are "vague and inconsistent", report finds...
By Andy McCue
Published: 13 September 2007 14:29 GMT
MPs have slammed the delays and lack of progress in rolling out a national system of electronic patient records, a key plank of the government's £12.4bn NHS IT project.
The NHS care records service will eventually consist of a national summary care record containing basic patient information which can be accessed in emergencies and a more detailed local care record containing more comprehensive clinical information for each patient.
Some pilots of the summary care record have now started but a report by the Health Select Committee found the scope, capability and timetable for the more detailed local record to be "vague and inconsistent".
silicon.com Public Sector
Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!
The MPs criticised Connecting for Health, the agency responsible for the National Programme for IT in the NHS (NPfIT), for a lack of local involvement in the care record project.
The report said: "Hospitals have often been left out of negotiations between Connecting for Health and its suppliers, and found themselves, as one witness put it, at 'the bottom of the food chain'."
The MPs said they are "dismayed" by the lack of clarity about what information will be held on the summary care record and what the record will be used for, and recommended the implementation of a single, standardised front-end screen to display key health information vital for emergency care.
Implementing a local detailed electronic care record is the "holy grail" for the NHS IT programme but the report said it is still not clear what information will be recorded and shared on the systems or which range of organisations will be able to share the information.
The only estimate for delivery of the local electronic patient record system is 2010, just for London, and the report said the shared records system "remains a distant prospect".
MPs blamed over-ambitious timescales that did not take sufficient account of the complexity of replacing existing systems and a failure to give hospitals responsibility for implementing their own systems.
Despite the problems the report said the local care records can improve safety and efficiency and "vastly increase" the effectiveness of clinical communication, adding that the overall success of the NPfIT should ultimately be judged on delivering this.
Earlier this week, a review of the 2002 Wanless report into the modernisation of the NHS called for an independent external audit of the NHS IT programme.
I am currently seeking a Summary Care Records Project Manager for an interim opportunity. The successful candidate will have the responsibility of ...
As the Business Project Manager you will work with various people within the NHS, including; clinical, academic, commissioners, informatics, and ...
The purpose of the role is to prepare a Policy and Procedures document detailing IG surrounding the Summary Care Records project so that the trust ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Nick Heath
Let's shine a light into the public sector IT money pit
With £16bn being spent, why is productivity still falling?
Tim Ferguson
BBC is taking tech seriously, so give it a break!
Auntie is the envy of the world but doesn't get the credit it deserves at home...
Peter Cochrane
Peter Cochrane's Blog: Open info for all?
Government stonewalling citizens
Nick Heath
Home Office CIO on taming tech and why ID cards are good news
Interview: Annette Vernon, Home Office CIO
Nick Heath
NHS records, Google and Microsoft: Where do you want your data?
Politicians: Heal thyself
Alan Hunt
NHS network: Time to get secure
Patient data in need of a check up