Apps

Matthew Gould states intention for the NHS App

In a blog post published on Friday, Matthew Gould the CEO of NHSX focused on the intentions for the NHS App and NHSX.

Matthew Gould said: “You might have thought that my first blog as CEO of NHSX should be about something general – NHSX’s objectives, or our plans, or even our values. But it’s going to be about my approach to the NHS App. Partly because it’s important, but mostly because it says a lot about what NHSX is trying to achieve and how we intend to operate.”

In the blog Gould said “I don’t want us to make the NHS App all-singing and all-dancing. In fact, I’m not sure we should add many more features than it already has. We will keep the app thin and let others use the platform that we have created to come up with brilliant features on top.”

“We will expose the APIs, so that other people can develop their own apps to meet their own user need — apps that can plug in, safely let people access their own data and deliver a different user journey.”

“We know that many of our patients want to interact with the NHS in different ways. We can imagine apps that are tailored around a particular long term condition, for example, or that help the user to book an appointment when their glucose levels are off. I want an innovator who can imagine a better experience to manage their diabetes to be able to build that experience, using our APIs.”

“This approach – creating the platform, and letting other people innovate on top of it – will ensure a continuing evolution of products available to our citizens and patients. It will mean those products will respond far faster to user need than we ever could and will provide more features and uses than we could dream up.”

Gould continued in the blog piece to say he’s been blown away by the innovations across the NHS and the many startups and innovations driven by clinicians.

There blog confirmed 3 important principles that will guide the approach and stated:

  1. there will always be some functions that are appropriate for the NHS to do itself and that citizens will expect of us – for example, it’s probably right that things like their data preferences should be set through the NHS’s own app, rather than an alternative
  2. there will be some things that it makes sense for the NHS to build or commission itself, like platforms that can serve common features  across the system. For example, we are looking at how both booking and screening can be underpinned by single approaches rather than a myriad of separate ones
  3. the systems and innovation will only work if they are properly tied in to the wider NHS. One of the early complaints about the NHS App is that its online booking function only gives access to a small number of GP appointment slots. This isn’t just a digital issue and reinforces my determination that NHSX should work in a thoroughly integrated way with the rest of the system, not as a tech ivory tower.  So on this issue, the new GP contract will require GPs to make at least 25% of their appointments available online