Transcript Slide 1
Future Informatics Vision
Update for Yorkshire and the Humber
Trevor Wright
Deputy CIO, NHS Yorkshire and the Humber
22nd September 2011
Agenda
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Design Principles
What does this imply for the future?
What does the future look like?
Challenges
Designing the ‘Future State’ – the approach
What does it mean for Local Informatics
Breaking News
A Briefing from Katie Davis, MD (1)
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What should we be thinking?
– No one want to throw away good work to date
– Recognise the need to change – and work in a very different way
– Need to learn from previous experience; develop what is working and
stop what isn’t
– 5 thoughts for the future:
• NPfIT brand isn’t helping us and needs to be dropped
– Failures masking our successes; Programme Bd scrapped
• Value for Money needs to be a core value
• supported by clear accountability and SROs
• Need to deliver benefits. This will need us to develop strong,
strategic partnerships and relationships with suppliers and
customers
• Need to be radical and innovative ; need to use our experience to
do things differently – need to challenge ourselves. “need to take
ownership, if we don’t do it, someone will do it to us”
A Briefing from Katie Davis, MD (2)
• Need to remember the NHS is what it is!
• “We all need to look for opportunities to improve the system
and service”
• “We are all patients, and we should be expecting change
leading to a more effective NHS”
• SLT seeking views and ideas from big suppliers as well as
other key stakeholders
• Recognition that early focus will be to support new
Commissioning system, but very cognisant of the need to
develop effective relationships with Provider sector
• KD conscious the old terminology will have to be with us for
a while, but not in a position to announce ‘future state’ until
Nov/Dec
Design Principles
1. Patients, the public and health and social care organisations will have access
to innovative, ‘best in class’ IT systems and services that meet their needs at
the lowest possible cost.
2. There will be a clear policy owner (in the DH or the NHS CB) for all IT
systems and services which we deliver.
3. Value for money will underpin decision making and we will be open and
transparent about costs and benefits.
4. Decisions will only be taken centrally where there is a single, clear need
across the NHS. Where this is not the case, decisions will be taken locally.
5. There will be a wide, varied and dynamic market of capable and engaged
suppliers of healthcare systems and services.
6. The NHS will be an excellent customer of IT systems and services.
7. Standards will ensure consistency across business, technical and service
boundaries and support clinical safety.
8. Non-IT professionals and clinicians will recognise the value of having a
strong IT capability at an individual and organisational level.
9. There will be an active community of IT specialists across health and care.
We will not create a separate national informatics organisation
unless there is a compelling need and business case.
What does this imply for the future?
Opportunities to
make information
widely available
Information is made available and
others provide the solutions (apps
or systems)
NHS Wide Systems
Delivered once where there is a
single, clear requirement
Local Systems
(GP, Acute etc)
All providers have a choice of
systems
There is a vibrant marketplace in
accredited IT solutions
What does the future look like?
DH &
NHS CB
NHS CB
Health & Social Care
Policy
NHS Informatics
Strategy
NHS Intelligent
Customers
Strategic delivery model
Standards
Strategic supplier management
Enterprise Architecture
Capability & skills
Best practice & innovation
IG strategy
Informatics delivery strategy
CCGs
Providers
Local Authorities
Systems Delivery
Delivery
Finance &
Commercial
Service
Delivery/
Operations
Programme
Delivery
Assurance &
Accreditation
Information Centre
for Health & Social
Care
Challenges
We need to:
• present the vision for informatics as our own – not driven
by PAC or MPA recommendations
• improve control of our financial and commercial baseline
and ensure that our future delivery model provides best
value for money
• develop a radically different approach to the way in
which we engage with suppliers in future, particularly in
terms of the delivery of local services
• work through how we will help commissioners and
providers in the modern NHS to be customers of
informatics services in the future
Approach: SLT accountabilities
A small core team led by Katie Davis will drive the
work:
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Alan Perkins: Overall implementation and transition
plan. How we get from A to B, including the processes
that will support us (e.g. HR)
Paul Jones: Overall strategy and vision – design of
the future ‘system’
Tim Donohoe: Design of the ‘delivery system’ – how
we will deliver systems in future – ownership of the
portfolio of programmes and projects
Camilla Taylor: Finance and commercial –
establishing a clear and open baseline and processes
for the future
Stakeholder Engagement: Objectives
• To shape the development of the future strategy
• To make it clear that there is a need for change (“do
nothing” is not an option)
• To generate support for the change from stakeholders
• To be transparent and open with stakeholders about
the challenges o be addressed
• To engender positive thinking amongst stakeholders
The outputs will be one of the key building blocks
to the future strategy
Engagement: Subject Areas
IM&T Profession,
Leadership & Best
Practice
Innovation
National
Infrastructure &
Applications
Strategy & Policy
Engagement
Standards
Finance &
Commercial
Portfolio
Management
Information
Governance
Design of
‘System’ Lever s
and Incentives
Local IT Provision
Supplier & Market
Management
Service Delivery/
Operations
Assurance &
Accreditation
Local Informatics - High-Level Project Objectives
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To effectively engage with stakeholders to ensure that new arrangements
meet expectations are consistent with other reforms and are ‘fit for purpose’
To help ensure the local organisations have effective Informatics capability
and capacity to support NHS reforms and the vision set out in the
Information Revolution and supporting strategies
To support and advise local organisations relevant to the design and
establishment of effective Informatics Service delivery models
To assist the SHA and PCT Transition teams in ensuring that (new)
accountable organisations have effective, efficient and capable Informatics
provision
To help enhance the capability of Informatics to enable local organisations
to exploit technology enabled change through the sharing of best practice
To help ensure that local Informatics has the opportunity to contribute
effectively to the QIPP programme through enable efficiency savings and
the delivery of effective service that offers value for money whilst improving
safety and quality standards
Project Workstreams
• Workstream 1 - Baseline
Assessment: This
workstream will have a short life
span and will focus on engaging
with the (current) NHS
Informatics service providers to
establish a more comprehensive
understanding of how services
are currently being delivered
• Workstream 2 - LSSO
Organisational
Development: This
workstream will support (new)
local organisations to develop
effective local Informatics
Shared Services.
• Workstream 3 Development of Local
Organisation Capability:
This workstream will support
(new) local organisations to
develop effective local
‘Intelligent Customer’
capabilities
• Workstream 4 Benchmarking and
Accreditation of
Informatics Services:
This workstream will review,
develop and deploy a range of
national tools to support local
organisations to assess the
suitability and value of their
Informatics provision locally
Stakeholder Engagement
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DIs Reference Group
CIOs/DCIOs Forum(s)
Intelligent Commissioner Programme Leads
Future State Programme Subject Area Leads
SHA Cluster Executive Team Representatives
CCG/PCT Commissioner Cluster Leads
Business Intelligence and Programme
Commissioning Support Unit Development Programme
Quality Observatories ( via existing national forum)
Suppliers and the Market Place
Local Informatics – Key Issues
Principles:
• Deliver service in an efficient and effective way to meet the
requirements and expectations of the ‘customer’
• Value added contribution to local QIPP Programmes
• Need to support integrated services and service redesign –
supported by standards
• Working with strategic partners to energise the marketplace
Operational Models?
• Responsive to ‘Intelligent Customer’ requirements
• Cooperation and collaboration
• Shared Services
• Joint Ventures
Questions
Trevor Wright, Programme Lead (Local Informatics)
Informatics Transition Programme
[email protected]