Healthcare IT news in brief
- 10 March 2017
In this week’s health IT round-up we cover the NHS calling in military help on cyber attack, a tweeting surgeon, and an alternative to NHSmail.
Oxford cancer patients can update electronic record remotely
Cancer patients at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trustās cancer centre can now update their own patient record to monitor their condition. Using Patients Know Best, a technology that enables a patient controlled medical record, 74 cancer patients can receive lab results at home, attend virtual clinics and complete online consultations.
Anna Schuh, a consultant haematologist at the centre, said: āWe donāt necessarily need to see our patients in clinic if their condition is stable but we have a tendency to call everyone to the hospital ā regardless of the complexity of their conditionā.
āThat is often very inconvenient for the patient and it places a huge pressure on the haemato-oncology department.ā
Oxford, also one of the global digital exemplars, is actively pursuing its digital strategy and has alreadyĀ advertisedĀ for 25 new digital roles to implement its āGo Digitalā exemplar plan, from electronic patient record developers to cyber security analysts.
Army stepping in for NHS cyber security
The military have been recruited into a NHS trustās fight against cyber-attacks.
The Leamington Observer reported that South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust is in talks with former military cyber security consultants.
The move is in response to a cyber-attack in July last year at the trust. The trustās latest board papers say that the IT director is āworking closely with the Armyā on cyber security.
Barriers remain to new health tech
A report into a huge and well-funded digital health programme has found that barriers remain to implementing technology.
Published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, the article examined the three-year Ā£37.3 million Delivering Assisted Living Lifestyles at Scale (dallas) project.
Dallas aimed to give four different areas in the UK access to innovative health and care technologies, including Liverpoolās More Independent (Mi) and Living it Up in Scotland.
This latest evaluation said factors hindering implementation included lack of IT infrastructure, confusion around information governance and a lack of incentives to prioritise interoperability.
Factors enabling implementation were clinical endorsement, digital health champions and public and professional willingness.
āAlthough there is receptiveness to digital health, barriers to mainstreaming remainā, the paper said.
First connection between NHSmail2 and local system
NHS Leicestershire Health Informatics Service says it has become the first public organisation to access NHSmail using its own local email system.
NHS Digital has accredited the serviceās local email system as being secure enough to connect to NHSmail2, the NHS email system with 1.2 million users across England, Wales and Scotland.
The organisation provides IT services to other healthcare organisation across Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland. It had decide that “local circumstances determined it was not yet rightā¦to migrate to NHSmail2ā.
Chris Biddle, IT assurance manager at the organisation, said the arrangement was a model for other health services that want to retain their local email system while still communicating sensitive information securely with the rest of the NHS.
Somerset deploys new e-observation software
Somerset Partnership NHS Foundation Trust has deployed Servelecās e-observation technology. The technology allows vitals to be recorded on mobile devices by the patients’ bed ide, which can then be used to generate an early warning score.
The community trust has deployed the system across 13 community hospitals. The observations are also automatically uploaded to the trustās RiO electronic patient record.
Royal London Hospital live tweets surgery
Itās not going to save any lives, but Royal London Hospital, run by Barts Health NHS Trust, has become the first trust to live tweet a surgery from an NHS account.
The tweets provided a āvirtual tourā of a day in the life of laparoscopic and colorectal surgeon Shafi Ahmed, including an successful operation to remove cancer from a patient’s bowels.
Ahmed said it was a chance to ādemystify surgeryā, to educate the public and āinspire future surgeonsā.
Our part of the operation is now finished. Now the HPB surgeons will take over. Thanks for joining us. #surgery #nhs #education WE pic.twitter.com/WSOmqERhtG
— @NHS (@NHS) March 2, 2017
Google DeepMind reports on Streams app results
Google DeepMindās Streams app, that alerts clinicians to patients at risk of acute kidney injury, has had its first few weeks at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust. The initial feedback reported by the trust says the technology is alerting 26 clinicians to an average of 11 at risk patients per day.
Sarah Stanley, a consultant nurse who leads the patients at risk and resuscitation team, said that the app is saving us a substantial amount of time every day. The instant alerts about some of our most vulnerable patients mean we can get the right care to the right patients much more quickly.ā
Streams has been dogged by controversy throughout its gestation and deployment. A media investigation by New Scientist in May 2016 found that the trust had passed over a huge amount of patient data without patient knowledge. However, the trust stuck by its guns and extended the partnership in November to a five year project.