Ellee Seymour

MCIPR, PRESS CONSULTANT, JOURNALIST, POLITICAL AND PR BLOGGER.

August 31st, 2006

Government warned of "descent into chaos" over revamp of NHS computer

A multi-billion-pound revamp of the NHS computer system is “descending into chaos”, warned MP Richard Bacon.

It is the biggest computer project in the world and has been blighted by technical problems and spiralling costs.

The on-the-ball South Norfolk MP, who was chosen by MPs as Backbencher of the Year for his work in exposing the foreign prisons scandal, has urged the Government to pull the plug on the scheme before it ended up “sleepwalking towards disaster”.

He is a member of the Commons Public Accounts Committee and has called for the controversial programme to be decentralised and for control to be given back to hospitals locally.

Under the government’s plans, GPs, clinics and hospitals across the country would be linked together by computer - allowing appointments to be arranged instantly and giving patients more choice on where to receive treatment.

Richard believes hospital chief executives across the country should instead be given personal responsibility - and funding - for purchasing computer systems locally.

As things stand, the upgrade of NHS computers, the largest IT project in the world, has been dogged by controversy and criticised for over-centralisation. Crucially, it does not have the confidence of clinical staff.

And the programme’s largest software supplier, iSoft, is under investigation by the Financial Services Authority for possible accounting irregularities.

Richard warned:

“The National Programme for IT in the NHS is currently sleepwalking towards disaster. It is far behind schedule. Projected costs have spiralled. Key software systems have little chance of ever working properly. Clinical staff are losing confidence in it. Many local trusts are considering opting out of the programme altogether.

“These problems are a consequence of over-centralisation, over-ambition and an obsession with quick political fixes.

“This programme is costing taxpayers a king’s ransom but it is descending into chaos. Our paper proposes a solution which would reduce the scale, cost and risk of the National Programme and accelerate the delivery of benefits to all NHS staff”.

It was only a short while ago that the Government faced chaos after a new computer system was blamed for delayed payments to farmers, causing hardship and financial ruin.

I don’t understand why this Government can’t install reliable, efficient computer systems that work. Don’t we have the technology? In theory, it sounds helpful to have a national shared NHS database, but can you imagine the chaos it would cause if it crashed?

If the progamme is scrapped, I wonder how much public money has been wasted. How many extra nurses salaries would it have paid for?

August 31st, 2006

Happy International Blog Day

Today is Radio 5 Live is plugging it like mad. They want bloggers to recommend sites.

The aim is also to travel out of your normal comfort zone and explore some new sites. This is a great idea as I do think some blogs are a little clique.

This site tells you how to mark the day, and with 52.6 million blogs to check out, you should have lots of fun today. I shall be joining and and will report back later.

Here are my five recommendations from those I already know, though I enjoy all those mentioned on my blogroll:

I recommend Geoff Jones, who launched me into blogsphere, http://www.geoffjones.com/

Iain Dale, who gives a humorous and punchy review of political news straight from the hip, http://www.iaindale.blogspot.com/

PC Bloggs, a policewoman who gives a great grassroots account of life on the beat, http://pcbloggs.blogspot.com/

Neville Hobson, who is always one step ahead with social media, http://www.nevillehobson.com/

and Margot Wallstrom, if only more politicians could blog like her, though I would like to see a few more posts, http://weblog.jrc.ec.europa.eu/page/wallstrom/

Thanks to my long suffering husband Stephen who heard this on the radio and told me about it, even though last night he was so cross with his late dinner that he threatened to go to Tesco and get something to eat unless I stopped blogging. It’s tough being married to a blogger!

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