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SCR access widens again

Tags: CfH   Community   consent   Discharge summaries   End of life care   GP   GPs   Labour   NHS Bury   Out-of-hours   Pharmacists   Pharmacy   Royal Pharmaceutical Society   Safety   SCR   Screening   Social care   Summary Care Record  

17 Feb 2009

Community pharmacists, end of life care teams and ambulance staff will gain access to the Summary Care Record in a series of pilot projects over the next few months, NHS Connecting for Health has revealed.

The expansion in the types of NHS staff who can access the SCR will be piloted in early adopter primary care trusts in Bradford, Bolton and Bury.

In Bradford, three community pharmacies are expected to be given access to the SCR in a “small, controlled pilot programme” that will evaluate the potential benefits of such an approach.

However, the British Medical Association said it had concerns about the impact on patient confidentiality. The plans were also criticised by Helen Wilkinson from the Big Opt Out campaign, who claimed it would mean patients’ medical records becoming widely available.

Dr Gillian Braunold, clinical director for the SCR, said CfH was “very well aware” of the concerns and that the pilots would ensure the governance issues were tackled, including robust access controls for pharmacists’ smartcards and discreet, confidential areas for viewing of the SCR.

She added: “Hospital pharmacy access to the SCR is already widespread in the medical assessment units in Bury and Bolton and is one of the most beneficial areas of the SCR. What we want to do now is look at whether the benefit of community pharmacists accessing SCRs is as it is hypothecated.”

A spokesperson for CfH said that it was insisting on “rigorous safeguards” to protect patient confidentiality. She added: “Access will be restricted to those healthcare professionals who need information to treat a patient safely.

“No patient records will be accessed by pharmacists without explicit consent from the patient and the patient is able to opt out of having a summary care record created altogether.”

The spokesperson said no decision about how the final system would work would be made until the pilots had been successfully completed and assessed.

David Pruce, director of policy and communications for the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, said he believed patients and doctors would experience a clear benefit from pharmacy access to records and that it would not present a risk to patient confidentiality.

He added: "Access to care records by pharmacists will improve patient safety because pharmacists will be able to view the patient record, and be fully aware of what care a patient is receiving elsewhere.

“Access to care records will strengthen pharmacists’ ability to make the best possible decisions for their patients, and will enable them to develop new health promotion and screening services, for the benefit of patients and doctors alike.”

Dr Braunold said NHS Bury and NHS Bolton would pilot use of the SCR for end of life care. She told EHI Primary Care that some GP practices in Bury were already adding information about terminally ill patients to the SCR for out-of-hours services to access.

She added: “The traditional method has been for GPs to send faxes to the out-of-hours service, which is labour intensive, has to keep being changed and therefore doesn’t always get done in a systematic way. “In this way, the information can be easily updated and those caring for the patient have immediate access to information about patients’ wishes and their exact medication.”

Dr Braunold said NHS Bury was also working on a project to give ambulance control access to the SCR although she said this was still in the planning stages.

She said all three projects were about using the SCR as had been intended, providing information to support care in urgent and emergency settings. She added: “The SCR is designed principally to be used where there is no other information available. It’s a torch where there is no light.”

In a paper presented to last month’s Summary Care Record Advisory Group James Hawkins, SCR programme Director, told the SCRAG that while the initial content of the SCR was a GP summary other clinical content already approved by the board consisted of inpatient discharge summaries, emergency department reports, outpatient clinic letters, out of hours reports and health and social care integration documents (Common Assessment Framework).

He said the roadmap for the SCR would see the roll-out of the GP contribution complete and fully operational by 2011 followed by inpatient and outpatient discharge summaries in 2012 together with patients’ contributions via HealthSpace.

 

Fiona Barr

© 2009 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Reader's Comments
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Reader's Comments

1

Conflict of Interest

17 Feb 09 22:02

Since most pharmacies are essentially shops selling over the counter products to patients, won't it be nice for them to be able to target shoppers based on the conditions shown in the SCR.

Or am I just too cynical???

i.e. there is a fundamental difference between a pharmacy shop and a doctors surgery.

I am otping out of this SCR thing.


2

what are patients being told?

maryhawking@tigers.demon.co.uk

18 Feb 09 07:02

SCR started with a committment to limit it to medication and allergies, and restrict access to those actually treating the patient in emergency settings. It is now, it appears, something totally different - includes clinical information including end-of-life plans (presumably this means the SCR will be able to hold free text as well as Coded information?) uploaded without further discussion with the patient from GP records, plus all correspondence from secondary care, and make it available to community pharmacists where the business model is that the pharmacist has a smartcard and all the dispensers use his/her logon. Why not make life really easy? Use clause 152 in the Coroners and Justice Bill for a data sharing order to abolish any need for consent of any sort? After all, the patients involved in the original Early Adopter (not Pilot) sites cannot have given *informed* consent to this new expansion in content and access, can they?

PS is the technology in place for this increase? and has secondary care learnt how to use NHS numbers yet?


3

Webview & EMIS Web options

18 Feb 09 09:02

I wonder if Dr Braunold is aware of Webview which enables GPs to input patient Special Patient Notes directly into the OOH Adastra system? If faxed OOH staff manually enter these details into the system.

Also on the horizon is EMIS Web interfacing with Adastra, a Beta testing pilot of this is currently taking place.

Richard V Glenister, IM&T Administrator, Baycall (Morecambe Bay/S. Cumbria area OOH - merging with Cuedoc, N. Cumbria OOH company as "Cumbria Health on Call" on 1st April 2009).


4

In defence of pharmacist access

18 Feb 09 15:02

I am frequently critical of NPfIT - but see community pharmacist access to patient records as something which will help patients, prescribers and pharmacists and improve safety.

I am a physician from a hospital background. I was grateful on dozens of occasions when a ward pharmacist >who knew my patient's details< questioned a prescription which might have been either ineffective or harmful.

GPs may never make such mistakes. However the need to 'chase' a GP to confirm a prescription which looks odd but is plainly OK when the history is known would be reduced.

Currency, accuracy and completeness of the 'summary', even the model of delivery/access/storage may be issues - not IMO the principle of access.

If you want to opt out because you don't want the pharmacist to know about your pregnancy/epilepsy/alcoholism/hepatitis/HIV/psychiatric disorder fair enough. However with those conditions you have propensities to drug side effects, interactions and intolerances which the experienced pharmacist may be best placed to identify.

As for the commercial and other non-medical care exploitation of these data I suggest community pharmacies are near the back of the queue, if they are in it at all.


5

Richard

Neil.Bhatia@nhs.net

27 Feb 09 13:02

Thank you for mentioning Webview, or Adastra Web Access as it is now known.

I contacted Adastra, they kindly sent me some info (here)and I contacted our local OOH provider. Turns out they already had the hardware requirements.

We now have access and it's brilliant. Thank you again.

Neil Bhatia GP

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