The programme was divided into a number of key deliverables. • NHSmail was renamed to
Contact in late 2004, before being reverted to NHSmail in April 2006.
The Spine (including PDS and PSIS) The Spine is a set of national services used by the NHS Care Record Service. These include: •
The Personal Demographics Service (PDS), which stores demographic information about each patient and their
NHS number. Patients cannot opt-out from this component of the spine, although they can mark their record as 'sensitive' to prevent their contact details being viewed by 831,000 staff. •
The Summary Care Record (SCR). The
Summary Care Record is a summary of patient's clinical information, such as allergies and adverse reactions to medicine. •
The Secondary Uses Service (SUS), which uses data from patient records to provide anonymised and pseudonymised business reports and statistics for research, planning and public health delivery. The Spine also provides a set of security services, to ensure access to information stored on the Spine is appropriately controlled. These security measures were queried during the early stages of Spine development, with leaked internal memos seen by the
Sunday Times mentioning "fundamental" design flaws. In addition, government spokeswoman Caroline Flint failed to dispel concerns regarding access to patients' data by persons not involved in their care when she commented in March 2007 that "
in general only those staff who are working as part of a team that is providing a patient with care, that is, those having a legitimate relationship with the patient, will be able to see a patient's health record."
Exceptions The NHS in
Wales was also running a national programme for service improvement and development via the use of information technology – this project was called
Informing Healthcare. A challenge facing both NHS CFH and Informing Healthcare was that the use of national systems previously developed by the NHS Information Authority were shared by both of these organisations and the Isle of Man. Separate provision needed to be made for devolution, while maintaining links for patients travelling across national borders. NPfIT was focussed on delivering the NHS Care Record Service to GPs, acute and primary hospitals, medical clinics and local hospitals and surgeries. While there were no immediate plans to include opticians or dentists in the electronic care record, services are delivered to these areas of the NHS.
Clusters and local service providers The programme originally divided England into five areas known as "clusters": Southern, London, East & East Midlands, North West & West Midlands, and North East. For each cluster, a different
Local Service Provider (LSP) was contracted to be responsible for delivering services at a local level. This structure was intended to avoid the risk of committing to one supplier which might not then deliver; by having a number of different suppliers implementing similar systems in parallel, a degree of competition would be present which would not be if a single national contract had been tendered. Four clusters were awarded in two tranches on 8 and 23 December 2003, Most of their responsibilities were subsequently transferred to BT Health except for PACS which was transferred to the CSC Alliance.
Local ownership In the first half of 2007,
David Nicholson announced the "National Programme, Local Ownership programme" (known as "NLOP") which dissolved the 5 clusters and devolved responsibility for the delivery of the programme to the ten English
strategic health authorities (SHAs). Connecting for Health retains responsibility for the contracts with the LSPs. Under NLOP, staff employed by CfH in the clusters had their employment transferred to the SHAs, with some being recruited to revised national CfH posts.
National Application Service Providers In addition to these LSPs the programme appointed National Application Service Providers (NASPs) who were responsible for services that were common to all users,
e.g. Choose and Book and the national elements of the NHS Care Records Service that supported the summary patient record and ensure patient confidentiality and
information security. As of October 2005, the NASPs were: •
BT –
NHS Care Records Service and
N3 •
Atos Origin and
Cerner – Choose & Book •
Cable and Wireless – NHSmail
Changes to service providers In March 2004,
EDS had their 10-year contract to supply the NHSMail service terminated. On 1 July 2004, Cable and Wireless were contracted to provide this service, which was initially renamed
Contact. IDX Systems Corporation was removed from the Southern Cluster Fujitsu Alliance in August 2005 following repeated failure to meet deadlines. This is subject to contractual negotiation known as 'CCN2'. In September 2006, the CSC Alliance, Accenture and Connecting for Health signed a tripartite agreement that as of January 2007, the CSC Alliance would take over the responsibility for the majority of care systems the North East and Eastern clusters from Accenture, with the exception of
PACS. As part of the handover process, around 300 Accenture personnel transferred under a
TUPE process to CSC, and CSC took over the leases for some of Accenture's premises in
Leeds. Accenture now retains only a small presence in the city for the delivery of its PACS responsibilities. In May 2008 it was announced that following the failure to conclude renegotiation of the contract for the Southern Cluster, CfH terminated the contract with Fujitsu. The majority of the Southern Cluster care systems were subsequently transferred to BT Health except for PACS which was transferred to the CSC Alliance, aligning with the technology deployed by each company. ==Criticisms==