Review of information technology in NHS
Review will look at ways to improve NHS IT, including electronic health records, to achieve a paper free health and care system by 2020.
IT expert Professor Bob Wachter has launched a review of computer systems across the NHS.
The review, ‘Making IT work: harnessing the power of health IT to improve care in England’, will look at places where IT has worked well and those areas that need improving. It will also look at different ways to implement IT in healthcare as the NHS works towards being paperless by 2020.
Professor Wachter said:
The NHS is one of the world’s largest health and healthcare systems, and one of its largest employers. It’s essential that information technology across the NHS works well and can perform the tasks needed to deliver high quality, safe and efficient care. I am looking forward to finding out about some of the great work taking place across the NHS and highlighting areas for improvement.
Jeremy Hunt, Secretary of State for Health, announced the review last year and it will report back to government in June.
Jeremy Hunt said:
Improving the standard of care patients receive even further means embracing technology and moving towards a fully digital and paperless NHS. NHS staff do incredible work every day and we must give them and patients the most up-to-date technology – this review will tell us where we need to go further.
The review will consider the experiences of clinicians and trust leaders as well as the current capacity and capability of trusts’ IT systems, as set out in the members include experts and patient representatives from England, Scotland, Denmark and the US.
. It will be formed of an advisory committee, the National Advisory Group on Health Information Technology in England,Professor Wachter, author of ‘The Digital Doctor’, which looks at how healthcare is provided in the digital age, will make his recommendations to the National Information Board later this year.
Members of the National Advisory Group on Health Information Technology in England
- Robert Wachter, MD, (Chair) Professor and Interim Chairman, Department of Medicine,University of California, San Francisco
- Julia Adler-Milstein, PhD, Associate Professor, Schools of Information and of Public Health, University of Michigan
- David Brailer, MD, PhD, CEO, Health Evolution Partners (current); First U.S. National Coordinator for Health IT (2004-6)
- Sir David Dalton, CEO, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust, UK
- Dave deBronkart, Patient Advocate, known as “e-Patient Dave”
- Mary Dixon-Woods, MSc, DPhil, Professor of Medical Sociology, University of Leicester, UK
- Rollin (Terry) Fairbanks, MD, MS, Director, National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare; Emergency Physician, MedStar Health (U.S.)
- John Halamka, MD, MS, Chief Information Officer, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Professor, Harvard Medical School
- Crispin Hebron, Learning Disability Consultant Nurse, NHS Gloucestershire
- Tim Kelsey, Advisor to UK Government on Health IT
- Richard Lilford, PhD, MB, Director, Centre for Applied Health Research and Delivery, University of Warwick, UK
- Christian Nohr, MSc, PhD, Professor, Aalborg University (Denmark)
- Aziz Sheikh, MD, MSc, Professor of Primary Care Research and Development, University of Edinburgh
- Christine Sinsky, MD, Vice-President of Professional Satisfaction, AMA; Primary care internist, Dubuque, Iowa
- Ann Slee, MSc, MRPharmS, ePrescribing Lead for Integrated Digital Care Record and Digital Medicines Strategy, NHS England
- Lynda Thomas, CEO, MacMillan Cancer Support, UK
- Wai Keong Wong, MD, PhD, Consultant Haematologist, University College London Hospitals; Inaugural chair, CCIO Leaders Network Advisory Panel
- Harpreet Sood, MBBS, MPH, Senior Fellow to the Chair and CEO, NHS England and GP Trainee