According to terms of reference published last week, MPs will focus on
patient data issues such as where information will be held, who will have access
to it and how confidentiality can be protected.
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The committee will also consider implementation issues affecting the
programme, which is about two years behind schedule.
The inquiry is one of a series of reviews of the programme in the past 12
months. In June, public spending watchdog the
National Audit Office published a report on
the progress, and since the appointment of NHS chief executive David Nicholson
in July there have been at least two further internal reviews, according to
health service insiders.
At a conference this month, Nicholson reiterated his support for NPfIT and,
while acknowledging the need for more engagement with NHS users, he rebutted
calls for an independent review.
Progress on the National Programme is patchy. The N3 broadband network is now
fully rolled out more than two months ahead of schedule, and implementation of
electronic X-ray systems is considered broadly successful. But installation of
complex hospital administration software has all but ground to a halt, and NHS
staff buy-in issues are still not resolved.
One result of Nicholson’s reviews is December’s creation of the NPfIT Local
Ownership Programme (Nlop), which aims to give local health communities a
greater role in the technology programme.
But NHS IT staff are not convinced the plan will go far enough.
‘If it actually happened, Nlop would be helpful, but it seems there is not
going to be any money or contract management – and supplier discussions are to
remain central – so it just looks like responsibility without authority,’ said a
senior source.
The deadline for submissions to the health committee inquiry is 16 March.
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