🌍 The Problem Today
At the moment, your health information is stored in many different places:
-
Your GP (General Practitioner) has one record.
-
Hospitals keep their own records.
-
Community services (like district nurses or physiotherapists) have separate notes.
-
Social care also keeps its own information.
This can cause problems:
-
You may be asked to repeat your story again and again.
-
Doctors don’t always see the full picture (medications, allergies, past test results).
-
Sometimes tests are repeated unnecessarily.
📅 The Timeline for Change
Today (2025)
-
Records are mostly separate.
-
Some areas already share basic information like your medicines and allergies through a “Summary Care Record.”
👉 What it means for you: You still have to repeat information at most appointments.
2026 – Shared Care Records in Every Area
-
Every region (called an Integrated Care System, or ICS) will have a Shared Care Record.
-
This links together information from GPs, hospitals, community teams, and social care.
-
Hospitals using modern systems like Epic (a type of electronic patient record – MFT has installed this already) can also start sharing directly with other Epic hospitals.
👉 What it means for you: Doctors can see more of your health record without asking you to repeat everything.
2028 – Linking Across the Country
-
Regional Shared Care Records will start to connect with each other.
-
Epic hospitals across the UK will share records more easily using Care Everywhere (Epic’s sharing tool).
-
Community services and “virtual wards” (hospital care at home) will be fully connected.
👉 What it means for you: If you are treated in another part of the country, staff there will be able to see important parts of your health record straight away.
2030 – One Joined-Up NHS Record
-
The NHS plans to give every patient a longitudinal record – one joined-up health and care record that follows you everywhere.
-
This will combine information from GPs, hospitals, community services, mental health teams, and social care.
-
Patients will also be able to see much more of their own record through the NHS App.
👉 What it means for you: Wherever you go in the NHS, staff can see your medical history safely. You’ll feel your care is joined-up, and you can also check your record yourself.
✅ Your Patient Journey: Step by Step
-
Today: “I have to explain my medication list every time. I’m not sure my hospital knows what my GP prescribed.”
-
2026: “When I go into hospital, the doctor can already see my GP record and community nurse notes.”
-
2028: “I was treated far from home, and the hospital could see my recent test results straight away.”
-
2030: “Wherever I go, the NHS staff have the full picture. I can see my record too on the NHS App.”
Share this post
Latest News posts
COVID Vaccination Side Effects
April 26, 2021
How to manage breathlessness
April 23, 2021
Indoor Air Quality at Home (NHS guidelines )
April 12, 2021
Aspergillosis monthly patient & carer meeting
April 7, 2021
COVID Vaccination – hesitating?
February 24, 2021
What is an MDT?
February 17, 2021
Aspergillosis Monthly Patient & Carer Meeting
February 5, 2021
World Aspergillosis Day 2021
February 2, 2021
World Aspergillosis Day, 1 February 2021
January 28, 2021
News archive
- ABPA
- Air Quality
- Airway Clearance, Diagnosis & Physiotherapy
- Antifungals
- Aspergilloma
- Aspergillus Bronchitis
- Biologics
- Blood Tests
- CPA
- Carers & Family
- Communities
- Complementary & Supplements
- Complications
- Conditions
- Diagnostics
- Environment
- Events & Recordings
- GP Guidance
- General interest
- Housing & Damp
- Imaging
- Immune System
- Lifestyle & Coping
- Living with Aspergillosis
- Mental Health
- Monitoring
- Monitoring & Safety
- NAC & Guidance
- NAC Announcements
- Other
- Other Forms Aspergillosis
- Patient Research
- Pets & Animals
- Professional Guidance
- Recordings
- Research
- Research Summaries
- SAFS / Severe Asthma
- Side Effects
- Steroids
- Symptoms
- Travel and Insurance
- Treatment
- Vaccines
- Weekly Updates
