Picture of clinicians
Cliniicians will be ablt to access information from any NHS computer

NHS trust gets ready for national sign-on smartcard applications

Interim solution will persuade staff of system benefits

Written by Tom Young

A London NHS trust is using smartcards delivered through the £12bn health service national IT programme to manage access to existing hospital applications.

Ultimately the secure, role-based card system being established across the country by Connecting for Health (CfH) will enable clinicians and administrators to log onto any NHS computer and access relevant information and services.

But so far only one national application is available at the Mayday Trust in Croydon ­ the Choose and Book electronic appointment service ­ and it is only being used by 200 of 1,500 employees.

In the meantime, staff will use the smartcards to access existing hospital systems via an Imprivata single sign-on appliance from supplier Enline.

By early adoption, Mayday hopes to establish confidence in the new technology and ensure a smooth switchover as the CfH upgrades become available, said head of information management Tony Varney.

‘When the national applications do come online everyone will have a card issued and
will be using them already,’ he said.

To obtain a smartcard, an NHS employee must fill out a form, bring in a driver’s licence or passport, and obtain a letter from a clinical sponsor to establish the remit of their employment. By linking the CfH scheme to existing hospital applications, Mayday is helping to stagger the rollout.

It will also help win over staff who are sceptical of the benefits of the scheme, said Varney.

‘There will always be resistance but now staff will know smartcards work and will be used to them,’ he said.

The trust also has plans to add local functionality to the system, if current NHS guidelines allow. Ultimately the cards could be used to pay for meals, get into the car park and manage physical access to parts of the hospital, said Varney.

reader comments

related articles

Picture of an Oyster smart card

The smart choice for digital tickets

The popularity of smartcards is increasing daily 23 Aug 2007

 

Barclaycard unveils smartcard details

Credit card provider will offer cashless payments with Oyster travel card 09 Jul 2007

NHS trials show benefits of mobile technology

Productivity and patient care could be improved by remote IT access for community health workers 06 Jul 2007

EU IDs to have photos and fingerprints by 2009

European Citizen Card offers security for travel, e-government and e-commerce 23 Mar 2007

NHS was warned over BT performance in London four years ago

Gateway review reveals widespread concerns over BT's delivery of care records system that later led to major delays and £1.2bn write-off at the supplier 22 Jun 2009

Hospital boss apologises for NHS IT problems

Staff have been caused "heartache" and hospital has lost £10m due to botched rollout of summary care records 13 Feb 2009

NHS must make better use of technology

Influential think-tank says the health service is being left behind and fails to exploit even everyday consumer technology 24 Oct 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

What does Windows 7 mean for Microsoft?

With the sting of Vista still fresh, Redmond has to make next Windows work 10 Jul 2009

A smarter way to use BI

Getting the most from business intelligence systems requires not only careful management on the part of IT leaders, but also the committed involvement of decision-makers across the organisation 08 Jul 2009

The truth behind the Google/Microsoft/NHS rumours

Before Monday 6 July, did you know that Google and Microsoft had services for storing health records? Thanks to an article in... 10 Jul 2009

Quenching a thirst for IT modernisation

A substantial restructure at soft drink supplier Nichols -­ purveyor of Vimto - ­led the company to update its software to Sage 1000 to replace its in-house application. This resulted in the streamlining of the IT department and an opportunity to customise the system 08 Jul 2009

How Satyam cleaned up its act

Chief executive CP Gurnani tells Angelica Mari why Tech Mahindra opted to keep the Satyam brand after it bought the scandal-hit services firm, and explains what the deal means for existing and prospective customers 09 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will Google Chrome OS be a genuine alternative to Windows?

Will Google Chrome OS be a genuine alternative to Windows?

Tell us your views on the new operating system rivalry

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Google ChromeAnalysis

Lack of enterprise appeal takes shine off Chrome OS

Enterprise buyers unlikely to ditch Windows for Chrome OS in the near term, say experts 09 Jul 2009

Satyam CEO CP GurnaniNews

How Satyam cleaned up its act

Chief executive CP Gurnani tells Angelica Mari why Tech Mahindra opted to keep the Satyam brand after it bought the scandal-hit services firm, and explains what the deal means for existing and prospective customers 09 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation