NHS Scotland signs five-year deal with GS1 UK to drive standards rollout

  • 26 August 2021
NHS Scotland signs five-year deal with GS1 UK to drive standards rollout

NHS Scotland has signed a five-year agreement with GS1 UK to help drive the rollout of standards within provider organisations across the country.

Working with the standards organisation, NHS Scotland is looking to use GS1 standards to enable them to identify, track, and trace products (namely medicines and medical devices), in conjunction with requirements laid out in The Medicines and Medical Devices Act (The MMDA) which came into force in 2021.

Furthermore, in March 2021, NHS National Services Scotland (NSS) selected Genesis Automation for a five-year strategic initiative to deploy a new inventory management system (IMS) in hospitals across the country.

This will mean GS1 standards such as the Global Trade Item Number (GTIN) – the barcode number – within the IMS will enable products to be traced. This means products can be recalled faster and result in better patient safety.

Part of the agreement will also mean NSS will have access to GS1 UK’s LocationManager, which will mean products can be tracked from the point of manufacture directly to the location of use at the point of care.

Jonathan Cameron, director of digital health and care for the Scottish Government, said: “We are delighted to be working in partnership with GS1 UK to increase the adoption of GS1 standards – the aim being to enhance patient safety, reduce unwarranted clinical variation and drive operational efficiencies in Scotland.

“Driving greater transparency and interoperability into our healthcare system will not only provide us with the data needed, but we will also be able to inform clinical decision making which is a critical driver for improvement.

“The implementation of GS1 standards will go a long way towards delivering our goal of the provision of even safer and more efficient care for our patient population.”

NHS Scotland becomes the latest devolved nation – alongside England, Northern Ireland, and more recently Wales – to commit to the widespread adoption of GS1’s standards, which provide a common language in healthcare. Such standards can help underpin systems, and processes to ensure data flow for every patient, irrespective of the care setting.

Glen Hodgson, head of healthcare at GS1 UK, added: “Because GS1 standards are both system and device agnostic, they allow for the seamless exchange of information beyond both system and organisational boundaries. This is the key to achieving traceability in healthcare and it is here where the true value lies.

“We look forward to collaborating with the Scottish Government and NHS Scotland as part of this partnership, to support the execution of their strategic healthcare objectives over the next few years.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Sign up

Related News

Digital Health Coffee Time Briefing ☕

Digital Health Coffee Time Briefing ☕

This edition of Coffee Time Briefing includes a call for chartered status for tech professionals and text message initiative for NHS Scotland.
Joe McDonald: NHS IT’s failed patient safety culture needs radical change

Joe McDonald: NHS IT’s failed patient safety culture needs radical change

An approach by a BBC journalist has Joe McDonald wondering what it will take to end the NHS scandal of flawed computer systems wasting public…
NHSDG warns 150,000 patients to assume data has been published

NHSDG warns 150,000 patients to assume data has been published

NHS Dumfries and Galloway is warning around 150,000 patients to assume that their personal data is likely to have been stolen and published online.

1 Comments

  • I notice that GS1 did a similar deal with NHSEngland back in 2016,with four trusts signed up to implement GS1 standards for procurement. I wonder how that inititiativ has got on. Have a thousand trusts bloomed into fully standardized parts of a monster supply chain? Or have the original six trusts fizzled out, like all the “connecting for health’ initiatives which have fizzled over the last 20 years?

    My guess is the latter, knowing how Trusts abhor data standards, and how successive NHS standards bodies totally failed to mandate them.

    I feel strongly about this because I tracked early attempts to implement Electronic Data Interchange standards( EDIFACT) into the worldwide procurement scene and the NHS -in the late 1980s. That was nearly 40 years ago. So it looks as if the NHS is even slower about implementing supply-chain standards than they are with clinical standards, which have taken them 20 years – as I claim ad nauseam in these pages.

Comments are closed.