As NHS organisations continue taking steps to modernise long‑standing systems, the connection between digital infrastructure and patient experience is becoming clearer. In January, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde confirmed plans to procure a cloud‑based digital records solution, an important move towards more integrated digital platforms.
In parallel, the government’s recently launched £210 million Cyber Action Plan highlighting the need to build resilience into digitised public services following recent NHS cyber incidents and associated regulatory action.
Healthcare is largely becoming a modern, digital-first sector and technology is no longer a back-office function. Many organisations are now acknowledging that legacy systems can place unnecessary pressure on clinical teams and complicate service delivery. Well-designed platforms will play a vital role in delivering effective care.
Cyber incidents often draw attention to vulnerabilities, but they also underline the opportunity to strengthen core digital foundations. Well‑integrated platforms give clinicians better access to information, help streamline workflows and ultimately support improved patient outcomes.”
While monitoring tools and incident response plans remain important, Bance emphasises that long‑term resilience comes from addressing underlying technology constraints.
When systems aren’t integrated or no longer supported, it can slow down diagnostics, fragment patient records and create additional administrative burdens. These aren’t failures, they are symptoms of dated infrastructure that simply wasn’t designed for today’s healthcare environment.
Sustainable resilience comes from platforms that are interoperable and designed for today’s healthcare environment. When data flows more effectively between systems, clinicians can gain a clearer picture of the patient journey.