9 February 2012 06:39


News
CRS  | Cerner  | CfH  | David Nicholson  | Fujitsu  | Granger
Twitter RSS Newsletter Send to a friend
3

NHS chief exec pledges to help resolve CRS issues

5 June 2007  

NHS chief executive David Nicholson has told Milton Keynes Hospital NHS Trust that they can count on his full support in resolving the problems they encountered in April after going live with the Millennium Care Records System provided by Fujitsu.

In April 79 members of staff from the trust signed a letter outlining their frustrations at the Millennium CRS system, describing the system "awkward and clunky" and stating: "In our opinion the system should not be installed in any further hospitals. Problems cited included incidences of lost records.

To help rebuild confidence and get a first hand picture on 14 May NHS chief executive David Nicholson and IT director Richard Granger visited the trust. "Mr Granger and Mr Nicholson gave the Trust their full support resolving issues related to CRS. The Trust is committed to working with CfH to improve CRS," a spokesperson told EHI.

NHS Connecting for Health said in April that there had been some "unacceptable problems" with the new system installed at Milton Keynes which "require immediate attention". Prime contractor Fujitsu said there had clearly been "some high impact problems".

The trust's finance director Rob Baird was quoted as saying: "The service to our patients in some areas has diminished in this period. At the moment we have quite a confused situation and it's like everyone had started a new job".

Since early April Fujitsu and Cerner have had a team working on site at Milton Keynes to resolve the problems.

The Milton Keynes spokesperson added that while progress was being made problems were still being worked through. "The Trust is working closely with Connecting for Health, Fujitsu and South Central SHA on resolving issues identified since the installation of CRS. Progress is being made, and clearly some issues will be solved more quickly than others."

 

 


Last updated: 4 June 2007 18:17

© 2007 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Please wait... loading

 
Add a comment

Register: To add a comment you must be registered.

Register

 

Login:

Email address:


Forgot your email address?contact


 
Password:


Forgot your password?prompt

 

Remember me

Login



EHealth Media Limited
EHealth Insider is managed and maintained by EHealth Media © 2012
Registered Office: 11 Campana Road, London SW6 4AS
Registered No. 4214439 | Vat No. 774 4008 29
About us | Advertise | Terms and conditions | Privacy policy | Contact us