At the start of the summer, NHS England’s new chief information officer, John Quinn, sent a letter to integrated care boards and trusts that set out seven, short-term, digital priorities.
As reported by digitalhealth.net, the so-called 6+1 priorities cover short-term objectives that the centre thinks can be sorted out in a matter of months. The first is smart system control, described as the rollout and optimisation of ICS-level dashboards to support capacity management and care planning.
The second is electronic bed and capacity management, or the rollout of flow systems at acute trusts to give them live, real-time data on bed status. The third is digitised records and workflow – “otherwise known as electronic patient records” – and the fourth is optimised waiting lists, or the use of data to manage waiters and optimise theatre capacity.
The fifth priority is dynamic discharge, or the rollout of digital tools to help multidisciplinary teams plan and track hospital discharges. While the sixth is AI diagnostic support and the seventh – the plus one – is an expansion of patient portals.
There are some odd features of the 6+1 list. The inclusion of EPRs feels like an anomaly when the NHS has been trying to digitise hospitals for a quarter of a century.
Its latest attempt – frontline digitisation – is a huge programme that will certainly not be complete in a few months. In fact, NHS England has just shifted its target date for all hospitals to have ‘minimum digital foundations’ in place back to March 2026.
On the flip side, it’s missing some health tech that has received a lot of attention in recent years – starting with shared care records, virtual wards, digital outpatient platforms for pre-op assessment, patient-initiated follow-up, and PROMs collection, and cloud telephony to improve access to primary care.
However, most of the priorities are both familiar and aligned to the national imperative to recover waiting lists and get on top of escalating demand. For example, Smart system control was introduced in last year’s winter planning guidance and is a feature of this year’s winter plan (which also features the “standardisation and improvement” of virtual wards).
There is an AI diagnostic fund in place to help trusts access tools to support the early detection of lung cancer and stroke this winter. While the plus-one priority was probably added when NHS England announced a ‘national requirement’ for trusts to have a patient portal in place by the end of the financial year.
This is what should interest health tech vendors about 6+1. It’s not a complete list of everything the healthcare system ‘could’, ‘should’, or even ‘is’ doing on digital. But it’s probably a good guide to what NHS England is most interested in right now.
Critically, 6+1 – like the other, identifiable programmes of tech-enabled work that can be picked out of policy papers and press announcements – indicates what the centre is willing to fund. Which matters when money is tight, which it certainly is right now.
If current trends continue, ICSs could run up a deficit of £2-3 billion this year. And as a general rule, when demand rockets and deficits loom, IT-funds are ‘redirected’ to fill holes. The Infrastructure and Projects Authority has established that £700 million has been cut from the £2.6 billion that the Treasury found for NHS IT in 2021, and most of the remaining £1.9 billion will go on frontline digitisation.
So identifiable pots of funding – £250 million for virtual wards this year, £21 million for the AI diagnostic fund, up to £675,000 for trusts that don’t have a patient portal – are valuable.
So, how can suppliers make the most of this opportunity? Well, the first step is to recognise the opportunity. For understandable reasons, many suppliers look to engage with the NHS by talking about the big-picture challenges that it faces.
They focus on how their ideas, services and products can help ICSs and trusts to address them at a strategic level, by transforming services or enabling patients over time. When what 6+1 and similar programmes suggest is that a tactical approach can be the right one.
Sometimes, you just need to look at what politicians and planners are asking the NHS to do right now, and think about how those ideas, services and products can help ICSs and trusts to it – while solving specific and immediate challenges for them at the same time.
The next step is to review messaging and to make sure you are using the right language. If you have a model for data capture and presentation, are you talking about smart system control? If you’ve been selling a patient flow solution, are you pivoting to EBCM?
Once you have your messaging sorted, think about how you are going to communicate with potential customers. How are you going to update your website or create a dedicated landing page, focused on the 6+1 priorities that you can address?
If you have a landing page, how are you going to get people to find it? Content creation is likely to have a big role – that means press releases, case studies, and thought leadership to raise awareness of your offer and explain how it stands out from everything else out there claiming it can address waiting lists or speed up discharge.
It may also mean targeted advertising, using traditional ad-buying, digital platforms, and social media to make sure your name is front of mind when NHS-decision makers are ready to act, pick an AI or invest in a portal. Or, it could mean using sales acceleration services to secure qualified leads and appointments.
Highland Marketing is an integrated communications agency that really understands the NHS and specialises in helping health tech and med tech companies to engage with it. If you’re ready to talk to ICSs and trusts about 6+1 plus other IT priorities, we’re ready to help you do it.
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