Informatics teams nicknamed secret weapons and C-3POs at GDE panel
- 28 September 2018
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Secret weapons and C-3POs were surprising soundbites from the UK Health Show in LondonĀ this week.
On Tuesday, the āWhat have we learnt from the Global Digital Exemplars (GDEs)?ā panel session was held at the event at ExCel London.
The panel included Paul Charnley, director of IT and Information at Wirral University Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Steve Gray, CIO at University Hospitals Bristol NHS Trust, Robert Howorth, informatics director at The Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and Beverley Bryant, chief operation officer at System C & Graphnet Care Alliance.
During the session, a member of the audience asked how clinical engagement could be improved.
In response, Gray dubbed the nursing informatics team at his trust the āsecret weaponā in helping drive staff to use IT.
He also revealed the unique nickname he had for the informatics team. āWe call them C-3POs,ā he said, referring to the CIO, CCIO and CNIOs.
Gray said that his trust didnāt have COWs (computers on workstation), but rather GOATs (gadgets on a trolley).
Gray’s trust and Wirral University Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust are both GDEs.
The Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust is a fast follower of Wirral.
When asked how the GDE journey had been, Paul Charnley said his trust was “still learning”.
He added: āWe donāt know all the answers.
āWeāre learning to accept knowledge from others.ā
Rob Howorth added that it was “still early days” for NHS Englandās flagship digital programme.
The importance of building technology with the user in mind wasĀ also raised as an issue.
On this topic, Beverley Bryant said suppliers “have to start with the user” when creating clinical technology.
She added: āWithout clinical usability, you might as well forget it.ā
The topic of āblueprintingā, which is the term given to how GDEs can share the knowledge they have gained, was also discussed by the panel.
Paul admitted it was something the GDEs were “struggling with”, adding the “competitive landscape” meant it was difficult to get suppliers to allow their products to be shared with other trusts.
NHS Digital’s CEO, Sarah Wilkinson, was also at the two-day event and gave a speech on how “we are entering the era of self service and mobility of data”.
Meanwhile Juliet Bauer, NHS Englandās chief digital officer, announced that the NHS App wouldĀ launch to private beta testersĀ across England from 27 September.