From the consulting room on a project that’s working

Dr Neil Paul has been involved in discussions about setting up a local, shared, computerised diabetes health record. Unusually, these are going well...
I’ve been involved in some meetings with our local acute trust about a shared, computerised diabetes health record. Things seem to be going well, so I thought I’d share some of my thoughts about why that is the case.
A clear vision and clinical leadership
There has been local talk of a shared, computerised diabetes record for about eight years, but it has never seemed as likely to happen as it does now.
The idea was previously hindered by a lack of understanding about what would be gained from having a record. Indeed, there was some feeling that secondary care just wanted primary care’s data for its own purposes, so all the information would go one way. " “No one wants pain without gain. We want each user to only have to input information once into a system that is designed for them.”
Now, we have two new consultants who are IT literate and are championing the cause. They want to record their own consultations electronically and share information in the most efficient manner.
They have made it clear that they see this as a two-way process. They are keen for their information to come to our records and would like access to the relevant bits of ours. The fact they can see the benefits and are willing to be open and to share is driving the process, which has built up real momentum.
Taking many users’ views into account has benefits for all
There have been several demonstrations from different companies, and at each demo we have had to have not just the consultants but diabetic specialist nurses, podiatrists, dieticians, opticians, GPs (me) and all the appropriate IT people.
Although this is very time consuming and difficult to coordinate, it is right and proper to have all these people present - after all, they are going to have to use the new system and they all have a view.
It is amazing how many times someone at the back of the room comes up with a question that has great relevance. So although it is expensive I am convinced that it will, in time, make implementation easier.
No one wants pain without gain. We want each user to only have to input information once into a system that is designed for them and that is specific to their professional way of working. "If everyone can use their own best system, that will be fine - as long as they talk to each other."
We also want a system that only presents information relevant to the user. Nothing is worse than being forced to double enter information or keep paper records as well as electronic versions because the computer won’t record things your way. Except, perhaps, having a record cluttered with other people’s entries, which are meaningless to you.
Realistic aims and timescales
It is very easy to get sucked into sales talks and future developments and to lose sight of the vision and what you are trying to deliver initially. By continually coming back to the vision, we stay on track.
However, it is amazing how long the process can take. Just seeing all the suppliers has taken months. How some of the national projects have such short timescales amazes me.
No one size fits all solution
I went to an EMIS conference recently where the company stated that it has realised it cannot be everything to everyone. Instead, it took a decision a while ago to interoperate as much as possible.
This is very relevant to our local discussions about a diabetes record, as we have had meetings at which it looks as if one party’s solution could almost do for everyone – but with compromises.
It has become clear that we are never going to get so many different parties to agree to use the same system, and that going down this route would give too much power to one group that is refusing to cooperate. If everyone can use their own best system, that will be fine - as long as they talk to each other.
Think global act local
Are there any bigger messages from our local discussions? It might be worth reflecting on whether all the national IT projects are just as clinically driven, well led by opinion formers, keen to take all views into account and similarly realistic about what is possible and how long it will take.
Another point to emphasise is that reorganising the NHS while you are trying to get a project up and running just makes it harder. Locally, our PCT boundaries have been redrawn three times in as many years.
This just makes all the staff unsettled, anxious for their jobs and unwilling to commit to anything, as they don’t know if they will be around in six months’ time; which makes it hard to deliver on a long-term project.
About the author: Dr Neil Paul is a full time GP working at the Ashfields primary care centre in Sandbach. He sits on his primary care trust’s professional executive committee and has a lead role for IM&T and Payment by Results.