🌍 The Problem Today
At the moment, your health information is stored in many different places:
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Your GP (General Practitioner) has one record.
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Hospitals keep their own records.
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Community services (like district nurses or physiotherapists) have separate notes.
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Social care also keeps its own information.
This can cause problems:
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You may be asked to repeat your story again and again.
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Doctors don’t always see the full picture (medications, allergies, past test results).
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Sometimes tests are repeated unnecessarily.
📅 The Timeline for Change
Today (2025)
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Records are mostly separate.
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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
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Every region (called an Integrated Care System, or ICS) will have a Shared Care Record.
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This links together information from GPs, hospitals, community teams, and social care.
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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
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Regional Shared Care Records will start to connect with each other.
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Epic hospitals across the UK will share records more easily using Care Everywhere (Epic’s sharing tool).
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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
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The NHS plans to give every patient a longitudinal record – one joined-up health and care record that follows you everywhere.
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This will combine information from GPs, hospitals, community services, mental health teams, and social care.
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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
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Today: “I have to explain my medication list every time. I’m not sure my hospital knows what my GP prescribed.”
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2026: “When I go into hospital, the doctor can already see my GP record and community nurse notes.”
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2028: “I was treated far from home, and the hospital could see my recent test results straight away.”
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2030: “Wherever I go, the NHS staff have the full picture. I can see my record too on the NHS App.”
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