Single patient record at the heart of NHS 10-year plan

Single patient records will be at the heart of the governmentâs new strategy for the NHS in England, ministers say.
Currently, records are kept locally by the patientâs GP and any hospitals they visit.
Work to link the records is already underway and ministers say they will form part of a drive to improve efficiency in the NHS as part of its 10-year plan.
Campaigners have raised concerns about data security but ministers say they are âfully committedâ to protecting confidential medical information.
It comes as the Government launches a new ânational conversationâ to inform a 10-year plan, due to be published in the spring.
âImportant stepâ
One of the key themes of the plan will be to move from âanalogue to digitalâ â and the single patient record will be a key part of this.
The government said this would speed up patient care, reduce repeated testing and medical errors.
Last year, a contract was awarded to the firm Palantir to create a database linking personal records held by local services.
With this, patients and those treating them will be able to get information about their health.
Campaign group MadeConfidential has warned that keeping even one such record would be âpotential for abuseâ.
But Stephen Kinnock defended the move, saying the Government was âfully committedâ to protecting patient data.
He said safeguards providing âcast iron guaranteesâ on security would be set out in a new bill that would be tabled before Parliament to push the move forward.
As well as this, the NHS app will be further developed so that patients can use it to book regular appointments and check test results.
The hope is that patients will start using it in the same way that banking apps have revolutionized the way people bank.
The 10-year plan will also focus on taking care out of hospitals and into the community.
The government said local neighborhood health centres, where patients can access GPs, district nursing, physio and testing under one roof, will form part of it.
But he said he wants to hear from the public about their own ideas for change as part of the national conversation.
The grueling engagement exercise begins on Monday with the launch of the website Change.nhs.uk.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: âThe NHS is going through the worst crisis in its history, but the NHS is broken, but it is not broken. Together we can heal.
âWhether you use the NHS or work in it, you see first-hand whatâs good but also whatâs not working. We need your ideas to help transform the NHS.â
Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patients Association, said she âwarmly welcomesâ the initiative.
He said: âFor too long, many patients have felt that their voices have not been fully heard in shaping healthcare.
âThis national conversation is an important step towards genuine patient partnerships and putting patients at the forefront of the development of the NHS.â