ICB Region Series: South East

For our ICB region series for 2026, we take a deep dive into what’s happening with digital and data across the South East region, sharing pilots and innovations, strategies, case studies, and insights from the sector.

Digital strategy, digital plans and priorities

Thames Valley ICB, Frimley and Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West ICBs

A collaboration agreement between Frimley and Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West ICBs has set out the future of their partnership cluster as “Thames Valley ICB Partners”. Covering an initial term of six months, the ICBs aim to work in collaboration to implement the 10-Year Plan, with objectives to commission health services based on population health needs across the entire geography of both partners. BOB and Frimley commit to ensuring that all relevant IT systems are interoperable, allowing for data to be transferred securely and efficiently. A due diligence process will be performed to ensure the safe and effective creation of the new organisation in terms of data, digital, IG, finance, workforce, operational readiness, and contracting operating models. Both ICBs will remain separately accountable for meeting NHS constitutional targets, system leadership and coordination to improve health, governance and assurance, and the commissioning and allocation of resources.

Kent and Medway ICB

Kent and Medway ICB’s Digital, Data and Technology strategy to 2029 shares intentions to personalise services, focus on prevention, promote interoperable systems, and use data-enabled strategic commissioning to target needs and allocate system resources. Setting out the system current state, the board refers to a “fragmented” digital landscape with varied maturity across providers, limited sharing of digital infrastructure and resources, a lack of an ICS-wide solution for multi-organisational care teams, and “poor” interoperability between digital systems. Five priority areas are outlined, including equality and digital inclusion, where the board shares plans to use population health analytics and risk stratification to identify need and target resources, to scale remote monitoring and virtual wards, and to build digital skills with targeted learning. Infrastructure needs to be secure, scalable, and interoperable, with commitments highlighted to adopting cloud-first and API-first architecture, implementing FHIR-based interoperability, consolidating legacy systems, and standardising data models.

Hampshire and Isle of Wight ICB

The latest Joint Forward Plan for Hampshire and the Isle of Wight has shared “renewed ambitions” around information sharing, digital access, and innovation in the region. It places a strong focus on enabling proactive care, better supporting the workforce, and maximising the potential of digital and data across health and care services. Over the next five years, key differences in HIoW will see resources increasingly directed toward the delivery of outcomes and away from processes to promote prevention, with an emphasis on a population health approach. HIoW highlights integrated neighbourhood teams and their role in leading person-centred care and a community-centred approach to wellbeing. Services will be redesigned to reduce unwarranted variation in access and outcomes, and resources will be maximised through partnerships, collaboration, integration, and clear accountabilities. “Digital and data” is one of HIoW’s partnership priorities, with plans to improve information sharing between organisations, remove data and tech boundaries, and facilitate better joined-up working across services and teams.

Sussex ICB

Sussex ICB’s Digital Inclusion Strategic Approach to 2027 shares the system commitments to promoting digital inclusion, along with measures indicative of success. Shaped by residents, NHS teams, councils, and community organisations, the approach reflects on designing inclusive services and addressing challenges people may face in accessing them. Centred around the mission of ensuring everyone in Sussex can access digital health and care services if they want to, or alternative non-digital options if they don’t, the ICB commits to building strong foundations by putting in place fair policies, purchasing the right tools, and designing services to fit the needs of the whole population. On what success will look like, the ICB points to providing “clear, easy-to-understand information about how personal data is used and how to access services”, and measuring how “people better understand how to find and use digital health tools and services”.

Restore Information Management on tackling the shift to digital, future-proofing information strategy, and realising the benefits of digitisation

We caught up with Simon McNair, head of business development at Restore Information Management, who shared insights from his work helping NHS organisations to tackle challenges around managing legacy records and making the transition to digital. “We particularly look to offer support in using technology to extract better value from the data held by NHS organisations, which can be critical to clinical decision-making,” he explained. “Also, with the shift to prevention, through access to the data, particularly as it’s being centralised around the Single Patient Record and national document repositories.”

Reflecting on the change happening within the healthcare sector at the moment, Simon talked about the “clear direction” set out within the 10-Year Plan from analogue to digital, structural changes being made to how funding is distributed, and the more complex landscape for ICBs in terms of delivering care to patients. Recent progress on digitisation doesn’t detract from the fact that some of the processes involving paper records that it is replacing have been in place for decades, he considered, “and I think the challenge is in that transition from a paper way of working to a digital way of working, benefitting from the technology and platforms now available offering better communication, better visibility, and better ways for patients to manage their care”.

For ICBs, the key is “understanding what you have, minimising your holding in terms of records and data in line with retention programmes, and then enabling clinicians to access the information they need efficiently to improve patient care,” Simon told us. “It’s also about a level of system or centralised support, for example going out to practices to support with information management, compliance, and so on.” There has been significant investment at national and regional level in technology that can help NHS organisations particularly in the primary care space to operate more efficiently, he continued, “a good example would be the National Document Repository, which has created a central database for GP and primary care records that the whole network can access”.

Effective ICB estates strategy

Central considerations for ICBs looking to develop estates strategies include consistent funding, gaining an understanding of real estate footprint and the costs associated with current records management practices, and exploring how digitisation could reduce that burden. “The byproduct of that is reducing operating costs,” said Simon, “or reusing and repurposing real estate in a more efficient way”. Progress on frontline digitisation, ensuring every organisation has an EPR, and the subsequent availability of data to improve patient outcomes has meant not only less paper records, but also more compliance, and better access to data when it’s needed, in the format it is needed, for clinicians.

“For NHS organisations that may have offsite warehouses and different medical records stores, coming out of those sites offers a reduction in ongoing operational cost, because you’re no longer paying the rent, the rates, etc.,” Simon considered. “We know the NHS is operating under huge space constraints, so if there’s a chance to repurpose the records room in a GP surgery into another consulting room, for example, there’s benefit there, which is multiplied up again if you look at that at a large trust.”

Future-proofing information strategies and moving toward a hybrid model

It’s becoming increasingly important to future-proof information strategies to make room for emerging technologies like AI, Simon noted, and the opportunities they may offer to increase productivity and patient choice. “It’s about using technology in a way that allows for more effective information management,” he said, “particularly where that information is hybrid – how do you apply automated retention processes, how do you manage requests to access that information, and how can you surface what you need quickly and easily?” Used properly, technologies such as AI can help improve retention practices and compliance, reduce administrative burden, free-up both clinical and operational time, and extract greater value from data, he added.

“Whether records and information are in paper or digital format, the key piece is having a really effective policy in place that is deployed consistently across the organisation,” Simon told us. “At a foundation level, it’s about having a robust approach to managing information, information governance, and programmes around compliance.” He suggested designating information asset owners, and ensuring clear cybersecurity protocols are in place, whether information is being managed or held within the NHS or with the involvement of third parties.

Best practices and key considerations

Moving on to think about what ICBs should consider when shaping their information strategies, Simon highlighted that there remains “quite a bit of work to be done” on addressing core foundations of how physical and digital records are managed. “In a significant number of projects we’ve done across both primary and secondary care involving large-scale uplifts of records, digitisation on demand based on patient need or patient appointment, as opposed to trying to just digitise everything, has worked more effectively,” he shared. “Having a clear plan and a roadmap, with funding in place, has led to greater success, in our experience, and having a single system to manage the patient record, along with a single view of the patient record, is a good starting point.”

For Restore Information Management, it’s about getting organisations to a point where they have minimised their records holding, are digitising based on an intelligent view of what’s required by clinicians, and making sure that’s accessible on platforms and systems in use across the NHS, Simon explained. “Our role, and where that’s worked well, is where those programmes are funded and very joined-up, because it’s part of a much bigger transformation programme – the part that we do often enables some of the effective investments in systems and a single view on the patient record, and those major EPR investments that the NHS has made.”

Talking about the positive direction set out by the 10-Year Plan, Simon considered how Restore Information Management is well positioned to offer at-scale, secure, and experienced guidance. “We can bring our expertise to focus on a task that the NHS essentially doesn’t have the bandwidth or the resources to do itself,” he said. “When it comes to the aims of the 10-Year Plan, and particularly moving from analogue to digital and getting a single view of the patient record, we can help tackle what is still an enormous challenge, despite sizeable process being made over the last three years or so.”

These challenges are already being addressed in practice. A recent programme delivered with NHS Birmingham & Solihull Integrated Care Board shows how a system wide approach to information management can support the transition from paper to digital at scale. By securely digitising over one million patient records across 160 GP practices, the ICB was able to improve access to information, strengthen governance, and support more joined up care across the system.

Insights from the South East region

NHS Sussex plans to improve dermatology services with digital tools and AI

NHS Sussex has committed to improving its dermatology services and making care “easier to access, more consistent and better connected for people with skin conditions” through the use of digital technology and AI. As part of the NHS Sussex Improving Lives Together strategy, the ICS aims to transform services for patients with eczema, psoriasis, acne and moles by introducing digital tools that can support the delivery of “faster, more joined-up care”. The implementation of teledermatology and AI has been highlighted as a key driver for this initiative and will be used to help review skin images and support clinicians with making decisions.

The ICS has also outlined plans to develop a “consistent Sussex-wide model of care and a single point of access for referrals” focused on delivering care closer to home, reducing waiting times, enabling more timely diagnoses, improving coordination between different healthcare teams and providing equitable care across the region.

Hampshire and Isle of Wight ICB procures ambient scribing and reporting tool

Hampshire and Isle of Wight ICB has awarded a contract worth £87,500 to Beam Up Ltd, for its ambient scribing and reporting tool. The contract, awarded as a call-off from a framework agreement, is set to run for one year, ending in March 2027. The solution, Magic Notes, is an AI-powered information and meeting summarisation tool with ambient transcribing capabilities, designed to support healthcare professionals. It is registered as a Class 1 medical device, with Beam Up Ltd listed on NHS England’s approved register of ambient voice technology suppliers.

According to the ICB, the procurement will allow “unlimited users”, access to Magic Notes and Magic Reports, and support with onboarding. It is hoped that use will promote improvements in quality, efficiency, and workforce sustainability across the region.

Digital cafes empower patients with digital skills in BOB ICB

Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West ICB has introduced digital cafes to support local residents with digital skills, offering one-to-one support on the use of tablets, smartphones, and the NHS App. Sessions are designed to empower participants on the use of tech in their everyday lives, for things like managing appointments, ordering prescriptions online, and accessing health advice. Free Wi-Fi is also provided.

AI telephone assistant for post-op assessments reduces waiting times for cataract care in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight and Frimley

An AI telephone assistant, Dora, is being used for post-op assessments in cataract care in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight and Frimley, with average waiting times falling from 35 weeks in January 2024 to less than 10 weeks. The assistant, which is said to have freed up 530 hours of nursing time in Frimley’s eye department, calls patients to ask a series of clinical questions, before interpreting their responses and identifying anyone needing follow-up care.