NHS IT director general Richard Granger has stepped in to delay the formal
announcement of proposals to swap software suppliers for the London region.
Sources close to the £6bn National Programme for IT
(NPfIT) say the plans for
prime contractor BT to replace GE Healthcare with rival Cerner will still go
ahead, but have been postponed for two weeks.
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A revised timetable is expected to be agreed this week, but the proposed
switch is on hold while Granger’s Connecting for Health team reviews the
supplier situation across the programme.
GE inherited the London contract through its
takeover of BT subcontractor IDX in November. At
the time of the acquisition, IDX had already been replaced with Cerner by
Fujitsu in the South because of delays in delivering the next-generation system.
So far in London the software has been installed in only one new NHS trust.
iSoft, the NPfIT’s other major
software subcontractor, is also facing difficulties. The supplier to the East
and North East regions has a patchy implementation record, and last week
announced a second delay in reporting its annual results. It has also revised
its expected profits twice so far this year.
Bill Green, chief executive of Accenture, which is prime contractor in the
two iSoft regions, said last week that the company has contingency plans.
‘We are watching the iSoft situation closely,’ he said. ‘We have a series of
alternatives and we’re prepared to go with those if it becomes necessary.’
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