"There is support among NHS staff for what the programme is seeking to
achieve, but also significant concerns among some staff that the programme is
moving slower than expected, and that clarity is lacking as to when systems will
be delivered and what they will do," the report said.
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The National Programme for IT in the NHS report, released today,
also found that NHS staff were not consulted sufficiently before the IT buying
programme began.
"The Department and NHS Connecting for Health decided to conclude the bulk of
procurement activities before focusing on communicating with and engaging NHS
staff," the report said.
"Wider engagement and mobilisation of the NHS was not started until NHS
Connecting for Health judged that procurement had reached a sufficient stage of
maturity to be able to communicate its outcome in a meaningful and efficient
way.
"It was concerned that to have done so earlier might have raised expectations
which were either speculative or may not have been met, and there were also
resourcing constraints."
Dr Richard Vautrey, a GP and member of the British Medical Council's GP's
committee, told
Radio
4's
Today
programme this morning: "If we'd been able to sit down with those who were
planning the system at a very early stage we would have been able to develop it
in a very different, more gradual way and we would have been able to avoid the
frustrations many practices have had."
Vautrey described the system as a hit and miss affair. "Often it does work
reasonably well and the more you get experience of it then it does start to work
for you, but it still remains unreliable and I think that's the problem," he
said.
Sir John Bourn, comptroller and auditor general of the UK, said that progress
had been made but there was still some way to go. "Significant challenges remain
for the Department and NHS Connecting for Health," he said.
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