Hodges' Model: Welcome to the QUAD: procurement

Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...

Showing posts with label procurement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label procurement. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2025

"Passport please!"

Press release

'Innovator passports’ set to accelerate cutting-edge NHS care

The move is a key part of the government’s Plan for Change and its 10 Year Health Plan, which will transfer power to patients and transform how healthcare is delivered, creating an NHS fit for the future.

For too long, cutting-edge businesses avoided working with the NHS and went elsewhere, weighed down by slow timelines and reams of processes. Now, organisations will be able to join up with the NHS quicker than ever before through the removal of needless bureaucracy. Not only is this better for patients but also for our NHS and economic growth.

A ‘one-stop shop’ thorough check from the NHS will now allow businesses to get to work as quickly as possible and deliver on what matters most to patients across the country. It means NHS patients will get more effective treatments and support quicker, and the NHS will make the most of its finite assessment resource, all while businesses are given a boost through the government’s industrial strategy.

Treatments including special wound dressings - already reducing surgical site infections by 38% at Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals - could be adopted more widely, benefiting patients across the country.

At Barts Health NHS Trust in London, use of antimicrobial protective coverings for cardiac devices has cut infections and saved over £103,000 per year. At University Hospitals Dorset, adopting rapid influenza testing reduced bed days and antibiotic use, freeing up vital resources.

The new passport will eliminate multiple compliance assessments, reducing duplication across the health service. It will be delivered through MedTech Compass, a digital platform developed by DHSC to make effective technologies more visible and widely available.

MedTech Compass will make these innovations and the evidence underpinning them clear to buyers within the NHS.

The initiative builds on the government’s drive to slash waiting lists and ensure people have access to health and care when and where they need it under the Plan for Change.

Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, said: 

For too long, Britain’s leading scientific minds have been held back by needless admin that means suppliers are repeatedly asked for the same data in different formats by different trusts - this is bad for the NHS, patients and bad for business. 

These innovator passports will save time and reduce duplication, meaning our life sciences sector - a central part of our 10 Year Health Plan - can work hand in hand with the health service and make Britain a powerhouse for medical technology.

Frustrated patients will no longer have to face a postcode lottery for lifesaving products to be introduced in their area, and companies will be able to get their technology used across the NHS more easily, creating a health service fit for future under the Plan for Change.

Dr Vin Diwakar, Clinical Transformation Director at NHS England, said:

We’re seeing the impact improvements to technology are having on our everyday lives on everything from smartwatches to fitness trackers - and we want to make sure NHS patients can benefit from the latest medical technology and innovations as well.

The new innovator passports will speed up the roll-out of new health technology in the NHS which has been proven to be effective, so that patients can benefit from new treatments much sooner.

It also forms an important element of the industrial strategy through the upcoming Life Sciences Sector Plan, which will turbocharge Britain’s life sciences sector and cement the UK’s position as a global innovation leader.

MedTech Compass helps speed up decision-making in trusts, allowing technology to scale faster - making it easier for trusts across the country to find, assess and adopt proven technologies that improve and speed up patient care.

The passports mean that once a healthcare tool has been assessed by one NHS organisation, further NHS organisations will not be able to insist on repeated assessments, reducing the need for local NHS systems to spend their limited resources on bureaucratic processes that have already been completed elsewhere.

The digital system will act as a dynamic best buyer’s guide, making it easier for trusts to compare products side-by-side in one place.


Read the full press release:
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/innovator-passports-set-to-accelerate-cutting-edge-nhs-care

In my source (below) Laura Hughes also notes:
'However, the Financial Times has reported on calls by frontline workers for basic NHS infrastructure to be brought up to a minimum standard before politicians extol the virtues of cutting-edge tech.

Matthew Taylor, head of The NHS Confederation, which represents health managers, said not all NHS organisations were at the same stage of digital maturity, which would "affect their ability to either innovate or implement preapproved innovation in this passport model."'


Individual
|
      INTERPERSONAL    :     SCIENCES               
HUMANISTIC  --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
 SOCIOLOGY  :    POLITICAL 
|
Group
innovation

personal passport

awareness of existing state / processes

innovation

'innovation passport'

duplication

innovation

public safety

waiting lists / times

accountability - standards - assurance

innovation

bureaucracy - multiple Trusts

procurement
of infrastructure and innovation -
cutting-edge technology




Laura Hughes NHS use of medical innovations streamlined. FTWeekend, 2 July, 2025, p.3.
https://www.ft.com/content/1d025579-990a-4d58-9e0b-6d0d29d27dab

Previously:

Wednesday, December 04, 2019

NHS as an Anchor Institution (needs conceptual anchors?)

... and four harbours?

INDIVIDUAL
|
INTER-PERSONAL : SCIENCES
HUMANISTIC -------------------------------------------------- MECHANISTIC
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
|
GROUP

CONCEPTUAL ANCHORS


NHS - mindset:
continuity
consistency
constancy
future career development:
Person -
not in employment, education or training

INDIVIDUAL level

size, scale, reach, solidity
geography

buildings - estate and places
reduce carbon footprint
working with local partners

nano - SCALE - macro
SYSTEMIC level
COLLECTIVE level




COMMUNTIES

for fleet of co-production and collaboration

domestic, state, global - SOCIAL level

NHS understanding -
local demographics
and residents

NHS as an actor for social benefit

Partner in a Place


SOCIO-

NHS as ANCHOR INSTITUTION
and [Good?] EMPLOYER

https://www.health.org.uk/publications/reports/building-healthier-communities-role-of-nhs-as-anchor-institution
Report: Building healthier communities

 increase access to quality work
procurement and commissioning
purchasing locally
policy
-ECONOMICS

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Architecture and Design: 4 beds in 4 domains

'Privileged' is definitely the wrong word. Perhaps it is the advantage of experience and the passing of almost four decades and more....

Times have changed since arriving at Winwick Hospital on a bike as a student nurse for an early shift at 0655. I would  leave my bike just down a small corridor to the right of the main entrance. I don't think I locked it. Then depending on the ward allocation I walked through the red carpeted front of the hospital to the increasingly rough and seemingly lost corridors beyond.

Hospitals have changed markedly. Winwick and other asylums have gone - thank goodness.

Cockroaches, leaking roofs, two-storey blocks where when necessary the patients would carry the meals up the stairs. A charge nurse set about ensuring that the patient's were provided with proper safety equipment if there were no lifts. The dormitories were large: 40+ bedded and more. There were lockers of some description I think, but personalised clothing was still to follow in 1977.

Despite the emphasis on community care, a project that in reality is still a work in process, the need for hospital beds remains. I have worked to keep people out of hospital, to help provide crisis support at home. When beds are needed the experience for members of the public and their families is radically different today. As taxpayers we recognise the need for efficiency in design, procurement, commissioning and managing new buildings. So it is within the NHS. Visiting new modern facilities, and this includes private nursing homes, you really appreciate the benefits good design can bring for patients-residents, staff, students and visitors.

individual
INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ------------------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
group
My space
Private space - observations permitting/negotiated
Space to wander
Space for wheelchairs
Colour
Personalisation
Temperature

Why is Joe staying in bed?
Why is Mary not going in the lounge?
...?
4 Bed Multi Bed Bay c/o ProCure21+


Public space
Quiet spaces (who says?)
'Community'
Lounge
Dining areas
Activities room
Noise levels
Meeting rooms
Interview rooms
...?



Public Engagement
Staffing
Volunteers
Project Management
Value for Money
Savings
Security
Policies
Safety
Services
ProCure21+
...?

Image source: http://www.procure21plus.nhs.uk/standardshare/

Friday, January 27, 2012

Health & Social Care - Safe Record Keeping Project

Dear Member

BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT and the Department of Health Informatics Directorate (DHID) have launched a project to develop clear and easy to follow guidance for patients and the public on the subject of health and social care records.

The project will provide patients with advice on how to look after the health and social care records and other sensitive personal data that they are creating or health and social care providers are sharing with them. BCS is inviting individuals or organisations to tender for the contract to carry out this work.

Further information about the tender process can be found at: ...

Please do not hesitate to contact me if you require any further information.

Regards,

Dr Wai Keong Wong
Project Coordinator
BCS and DH project for safe patient record
w.wong AT bcs.org

My source: BCS, Dr Wai Keong Wong with thanks.

Friday, September 10, 2010

England: The future of the National Programme for IT

Department of Health - 09 Sep 2010 12:32
The future of the National Programme for IT
-----------------------------------------------------

A Department of Health review of the National Programme for IT has concluded that a centralised, national approach is no longer required, and that a more locally-led plural system of procurement should operate, whilst continuing with national applications already procured.

http://www.wired-gov.net/wg/wg-news-1.nsf/lfi/415392

My source: Wired-GOV