14 Jun 2007
Bury NHS Primary Care Trust (PCT) is joining the pilot of the electronic care record system at the heart of the £12bn National Programme for NHS IT (NPfIT).
The Lancashire trust’s involvement comes at a time of continued controversy over the scheme.
In a House of Commons debate last week, Conservative MP Stephen O’Brien called for an independent review. And NPfIT director general Richard Granger will be among witnesses at a health select committee hearing today (Thursday).
The first live trials of electronic records started in Bolton last month. Under the scheme, participating patients’ summary information holding details of allergies, medication and adverse reactions are available to casualty departments, out-of-hours GP clinics and ambulance services, via the national spine.
In Bury, work is now under way to create summary records, with letters being sent out to every person over 16 who is registered with a GP to explain how the system will work.
For patients not opting out of the system, it will be operational in October, says Bury PCT IT director Ann Halpin.
'We are in a good position to be an early adopter because we have good IT
infrastructure and data quality and a common system across GP practices,’
she said.
‘The benefits are better treatment and improved safety.’
So far 24 of the area’s 31 GPs have signed up to the initiative, which covers 73 per cent of the PCT’s population.
‘The majority of GPs are engaged as we have given them as much information as possible,’ said Halpin.
Have your say on this article
Newsletters
Latest stories from Public Sector
You may also like
Public Sector jobs
Technology Patent Wars
Case studies from large organisations across all sectors
... And rich media, and flexible working, and peaks in traffic ...
Upcoming Events
Join us for this Computing web seminar, in which the Head of BI at the Co-operative Group Nick Colebourn will be explaining just how he reigned in the Group’s sprawling database estate and how significant savings were realised and data quality improved as a result.
Date: 31 May 2012
Time: 11:00 AM
Live June 13th 11:00am: Register now. During this web seminar we will be looking at the sorts of incidents that can bring data centres grinding to a halt and what can be done about them.
Date: 13 Jun 2012
Time: 11:00 am
Receive the latest jobs direct to your inbox
Are you being paid what you are worth?