Mr. Bacon: To ask the Secretary of State for Health (1) what his latest estimate is of the number of users of the Lorenzo software system at (a) Five Boroughs Partnership NHS Trust, (b) Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, (c) University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Trust, (d) Hereford Hospitals Trust and (e) South Birmingham Primary Care Trust; [295789]
(2) what his latest estimate is of the highest number of live concurrent users of the Lorenzo software system across English NHS trusts (a) at any one time and (b) on any one day. [295790]
Mr. Mike O'Brien: The numbers of regular users of Release 1 of the Lorenzo software system in the national health service bodies concerned are as follows:
|
Number |
Five Boroughs Partnership NHS Trust |
43 |
Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
12 |
University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Trust |
96 |
Hereford Hospitals NHS Trust |
7 |
South Birmingham Primary Care Trust |
16 |
These figures exclude other registered users who use the system only occasionally.
The highest number of live concurrent users across English NHS trusts at any one time, to date, is 19. This occurred on 6 October 2009. The number of concurrent users of the system is lower than the aggregate number of regular users because clinicians spend the majority of their time working directly with patients. Time spent using the system is relatively short, and in most care settings, users will log in and log out of the system repeatedly throughout the day.
Mr. Bacon: To ask the Secretary of State for Health whether the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is on schedule to go live with its electronic patient management and care record system. [243190]
Mr. Bradshaw: We understand that Newcastle upon Tyne hospitals NHS foundation trust has no reason to believe that it will not go live with its new patient management and care record system next year as planned. The trust is working closely with its commercial partner, and in collaboration with NHS Connecting for Health, to ensure that all project timescales are met.
Mr. Bacon: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what information his Department holds on when a complete version of Lorenzo Release 2 will undergo tests in the UK. [243191]
Mr. Bradshaw: We anticipate that the main build of Lorenzo release 2.0, containing care management functionality, will be available for ongoing testing in the United Kingdom by the end of December 2008.
Mr. Bacon: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many users of the Lorenzo system there are at the (a) Morecambe Bay Hospitals NHS Trust, (b) Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and (c) South Birmingham Primary Care Trust; and what the average number of concurrent users of the Lorenzo product was at each of those trusts in the last month for which figures are available. [243193]
Mr. Bradshaw: At Morecambe Bay hospitals NHS trust there is currently limited clinical usage in a single ward, with 10 system users. At South Birmingham primary care trust, the system is being used by the podiatry team, involving 14 users. Bradford teaching hospitals NHS foundation are preparing to go live in the new year and there are therefore no live system users at present.
Information on the number of concurrent users is not held centrally.
Mr. Bacon: To ask the Secretary of State for Health on what dates (a) Department of Health officials received a demonstration of the Lorenzo software product and (b) local service provider contracts were signed under the National Programme for IT in the NHS for the Lorenzo software product; and what the planned delivery date for the Lorenzo software product was when those contracts were signed. [243434]
Mr. Bradshaw: Lorenzo release 1.0 and components of release 2.0 were first demonstrated to NHS Connecting for Health officials in India during 2007, followed by a number of demonstrations to NHS clinicians, officials and to some Public Accounts Committee members in the UK in 2008. More general demonstrations of the software have been provided since September 2008 to national health service staff.
The original relevant local service provider contracts signed in 2003 did not refer specifically to the Lorenzo product by name but to an integrated care service. A later contract reset on 8 January 2007 covered a two-release strategy for Lorenzo with the following release key milestones:
Lorenzo release 3.5—30 June 2008; and
Lorenzo release 4.0—30 June 2009.
A four-release strategy has now been adopted.