Podcast: Plans to transform the digital workforce

You can listen to a new podcast by NHS England’s digital workforce team to learn about their plan to narrow the skills gap for digital, data, technology and informatics roles. During it, senior digital leaders in the health and care system talk about what they think is fundamental to the success of the plan.

Case study: How to save hundreds of hours verifying student identities

The Apply for Care ID service enables health and care staff needing to access national clinical information systems and data to verify their identity remotely. Read our latest case study to find out how the service is supporting Registration Authorities, students and student support teams, as well as how your organisation can start using the service.

Help us improve: Integrating with our APIs

We are seeking feedback from organisations that have used our APIs or our API catalogue during 2022 to help us build on what we are doing well and make improvements where needed.  

If you can help, please complete our Developer Integration Survey. It takes about 5-10 minutes to complete and is open until 31 January. 

Event: NHS ConfedExpo 2023

This year’s NHS ConfedExpo will take place on 14 and 15 June at Manchester Central. The event will bring together health and care leaders and their teams from across the sector for 2 days of inspiring sessions, shared learning, and valuable networking opportunities.     

NHS, local authority and wider public sector staff are eligible for a free ticket. Register your interest in attending and follow @ConfedExpo on Twitter for the latest updates.

Event: National Care Records Service

You’re invited to attend an online session to learn about the new National Care Records Service (NCRS) and how to migrate or get access to it.  The NCRS is the improved successor to the Summary Care Record application (SCRa).  

Register for the 2 February session aimed at people working in pharmacy. 

Register for the 7 February session aimed at people who work in clinical, pharmacy, ambulance or care roles. 

For information: Improving our approach to communicating with you 

We are tweaking our approach to this bulletin in response to feedback. Instead of relying on a monthly bulletin, which has sometimes meant information has arrived too late and buried in a long email,  essential information for digital leaders will appear on this section of the website. 

When essential items are added to the website we will email you an alert. You will receive a short summary of these alerts every month instead of the bulletin 

If you have any feedback, please contact bulletins.nhsdigital@nhs.net. 

For information: NHS Digital merges with NHS England

In February 2023, NHS Digital will merge with NHS England. NHS England will assume responsibility for all activities previously undertaken by NHS Digital. 

NHS Digital’s systems and services will continue to operate as normal and contracts will automatically transfer to NHS England, with terms and conditions unchanged.  

Read more about the changes.

NHS App hits over 30 million sign-ups

Millions more patients across England are benefitting from easier access to their health records and medical services through the NHS App, as sign ups top 30 million – including seven million new sign ups in 2022.

The app, which launched four years ago, was one of the most popular free health apps of 2022 – with more people accessing its range of features, including over 65 million GP record views.

The government has already met its target to have 68% of people in England registered with the NHS App by March 2023 and is firmly on track to meet its second target to have 75% of people registered by 2024.

The app offers a digital front door for interacting with the NHS and has seen a host of new features launched in the last 12 months – empowering patients to access services from the comfort of their homes. 

Simon Bolton, Interim Chief Executive at NHS Digital, said: 

“The NHS App continues to change the way people in England access healthcare services. Since it was launched four years ago, millions of people have used it to book GP appointments, order repeat prescriptions and view GP records. 

“We’ve also added new features to the app to help people manage hospital appointments, book Covid vaccinations and receive messages from GPs. The NHS App is a great example of how technology can be used to help people take control of their healthcare and access NHS services quickly and easily.” 

Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said: 

“Technology is transforming the way we use the NHS and with over 30 million sign ups to the NHS App across the country, including seven million last year alone, there is huge potential to modernise services for patients and staff. 

“In the last year alone 22 million repeat prescriptions have been ordered through the app, saving valuable time for clinicians and helping people access their treatment as easily as possible. 

“On top of this we have added innovative new features – from accessing GP records to booking Covid jabs  – which will help us ease pressures on GPs and other primary care services and provide more effective, personalised care. If you haven’t already I’d encourage you to download the app and see how it can help you access the services you need.” 

The NHS App is supporting hardworking NHS staff as they work tirelessly to clear the Covid backlogs, freeing up valuable clinician time as well as empowering patients to have greater control over their health and care records. 

A total of 1.7 million GP appointments were booked through the NHS App last year and a record breaking 22 million repeat prescriptions ordered, up from 9 million over the same period the year prior. 128,000 people also registered their organ donation decision through the NHS App.

Patients in many parts of the country are also able to view and manage their hospital appointments on the app – helping to build a modern, digital NHS. The new features include viewing all referrals and future hospital appointments in one place, accessing supporting information for appointments – such as hospital maps – along with booking, changing and cancelling appointments. 

The new features are available to patients at 20 NHS Trusts across the country from York and Scarborough to Royal Cornwall – with another 24 trusts expected to be available by March 2023 – and has been used over 800,000 times.  

Lords Minister For Technology Nick Markham said: 

“Millions of patients have continued to sign up to the NHS App, helping to generate a record number of views and modernise how our health service works. 

“We will continue to innovate and incorporate new features to ensure that patients can access convenient, high quality care when and where they need it.” 

People can also receive notifications from their GPs, a feature which has been rolled out across nearly 2,000 practices. Thanks to this effort over 700,000 messages to update patients including appointment reminders and test results have been successfully processed. 

People are also benefitting from the ability to book a Covid vaccine appointment through the NHS App. More than 28,000 bookings have been made via this route in just four weeks since the feature was added in November, accounting for 9% of all bookings since this feature was enabled. 

Thanks to these kind of features, millions of people are benefitting from easier and quicker access to NHS services – and the government will continue to build on the progress which has already been made. 

New features in the app available in 2023 will ensure patients can access more NHS services at their fingertips – including booking their flu vaccination and accessing hospital correspondence, such as pre-consultation questionnaires.

New online community launched to support health tech professionals

A new online tech community has been launched by NHS Digital, aimed at supporting those working to integrate systems with national healthcare services.

IT professionals who connect with NHS Digital systems are being invited to join a new online forum to share ideas and solutions more easily.

More than 200 users have already signed up to the new developer community, which aims to create an online space open to anyone wanting to integrate with NHS Digital’s Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) platform.

The API platform provides a set of products and services to make it easier to build and integrate with national systems. These are used by point-of-care and patient-facing applications to talk to back-end applications. Most are NHS Digital-owned but some are owned by third parties. The platform provides a consistent experience for API consumers and producers, helping to make integration easier.

The idea for the developer community came after a survey, carried out by NHS Digital, showed 76% of existing users, consisting of chief technology officers, project managers, business analysts and developers, were in favour of a well-supported, official NHS forum to provide them with the help and support they need.

NHS Digital business analyst Ernest Kissiedu, whose role involves supporting API Management, said: “We realised we could improve the way we do things by providing an open forum to create a sense of community among our API developers.

“We were offering developer support to API Product teams using email, MS Teams, and Slack channels. But every week, we were receiving the same queries relating to the same issues such as getting started on NHS Digital APIs, accessing our path to live environments, and onboarding.

“By answering these questions in an open forum, we realised more people would be able to see the solutions to these problems.

“We want to support our developers by ensuring they have a positive experience and encourage them to use our APIs to develop cost-effective, digital services designed around the needs of our health and care professionals, patients, and the public.”

The developer community is open for anyone to browse or search for answers to queries. Those who set up developer hub accounts will also be able to post and respond to other threads featured on the forum. Feedback can also be left to help contribute to the pilot.

Shan Rahulan, Director of Platforms for Core Services at NHS Digital, added: “I'm really keen to work in the open so that we can bring all the expertise and experience we have across the health and care service together. There are a lot of people outside NHS Digital whose expertise we can harness.

“We want all our users to get involved and for new ones to sign up too, to help shape the future of the developer community by providing feedback on NHS products and services.

“The long-term vision for the community is to make it easier for the health and care system to access support, insight, and knowledge. By creating an open environment, we hope people in the community will come together to help each other and share their experiences.”

Case study: Ensuring new technology improves primary care access

Swan Medical Centre in Birmingham needed to meet rising demand and improve efficiency. They introduced an online consultation system to help manage triage and develop more efficient communications between patients and the practice team. However, the online consultation system has delivered many more benefits than they expected. Read their story.