Most read and commented, 2015
Digital Health News readers had a āwhat the flipping heckā moment in March, judging by the fact that āEmis and TPP sign data sharing pactā was the most commented story of 2015.
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Digital Health News readers had a āwhat the flipping heckā moment in March, judging by the fact that āEmis and TPP sign data sharing pactā was the most commented story of 2015.
GPs must offer patients access to their ‘detailed coded record’ by the end of March next year; and NHS England has now released guidance explaining what this will mean.
Burton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust plans to upgrade its Meditech electronic patient record in the next few months.
The last appointments round-up of 2015 has news of change at the very top of the Department of Health, at the controversial care.data programme, and at trusts and healthcare IT suppliers in the UK.
A Southampton hospital plans to digitise its existing patient records and replace paper processes with electronic forms using Hylandās electronic document management system OnBase by Hyland, before closing its records library in 2017.
Free wi-fi will be available across all NHS buildings in England as part of the governmentās commitment to a paperless health service by 2020, health secretary Jeremy Hunt has said.
The medical records of patients at a mental health trust in Leeds are now available on the cityās shared electronic care record.
Henley Business School has been awarded an Ā£1.2m grant to develop an AI system for
NHS Orkney has announced plans to go live with an electronic patient record app in
Digital Health chief executive Jon Hoeksma has won ‘Ally of the Year’ at the National
Women in Somerset with breast lumps will be directly referred to a breast diagnostic clinic
Kevin Jarrold has retired from the role of joint CIO at Imperial College Healthcare and