ICB Region Series: North West

For this edition of our ICB region series for 2026, we take a deep dive into what’s happening with digital and data across the North West region. We’ll explore pilots and innovations, strategies, case studies, and insights from the sector.

Digital strategy, digital plans and priorities

Cheshire and Merseyside ICB

Cheshire and Merseyside ICB has outlined a range of digital plans and priorities to 2031 in its five-year clinical and strategic commissioning plan. The ICB discusses how it will build on its digital and data ambitions of strong foundations, and “at scale” digital and data platforms, tools, and services. This will reportedly involve ensuring all providers meet agreed baseline standards for digital capability, harmonising digital systems and infrastructure with shared architecture, rapidly implementing new digital technology, and building a system-wide digital workforce including pooled specialist expertise where required.

Estates upgrades will integrate smart tech to reduce administrative burden and promote self-management, the ICB states, with a single source of estates data to be delivered to support wider medium-to-long-term population health management objectives and improve operational efficiency. Resources will be shifted toward prevention and proactive care with a £29.6 million transformation fund for 2026-27 that the ICB reports will rise in future years. Neighbourhood teams will be commissioned to use population health management tools to deliver proactive support and personalised care, the ICB highlights, with a shared care neighbourhood-based prescribing service to reduce unnecessary outpatient attendances. The ICB moves on to talk about digital as an enabler of safe and efficient care through digital pathways, enhanced access, tools for diagnostics, and remote support.

In the period from 2027-29, ambitions include completing the onboarding of FDP core products and developing FDP as a strategic commissioning tool, deploying a “long term” ambient voice solution, continuing the roll out of AI, maximising shared care record adoption, reviewing shared care record strategy and approach in line with national Single Patient Record plans, and rolling out the single “at scale” platform for neighbourhood health. 

Greater Manchester ICB

Greater Manchester ICB recently offered the latest on its digital and data plans, indicating in a new clinical strategy the role that digital infrastructure, digital tools, and real-time data will play in future care. Ambitions include improving health outcomes through prevention and early intervention, enhancing patient experience via integrated and person-centred care models, and reducing hospital admissions and length of stay with community-based services. Health inequalities will be reduced via co-design with VCFSE partners and community representatives, along with use of the GM Care Record and real-time data to help identify gaps, it notes. 

The ICB makes a commitment to “transform, scale and pipeline”, drawing on research, system improvement coordination, digital transformation, and AI. Over the next 12 months, AI and digital tools will be used to increase clinical productivity and efficiency, it notes, in the form of solutions like ambient scribe and theatre optimisation tools. 

Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB

Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB has set out its ambitions for a unified EPR, digital front door, and virtual command centre, with an aim to halve the time lost to clinical systems administration by 2032 and improve flow across the system. In its clinical strategy for 2026/27 to 2031/32, the ICB highlights its costs are “around six pence in every pound above peer averages”, noting: “We must unlock the ‘trapped value’ in our system by aligning improvement, transformation and digital programmes — and by embedding a more commercial and innovation-focused mindset.” Data, digital, and technology will be harnessed to drive system efficiency, it continues, with the aim of realising benefits by 2030 from tech advancements such as intelligent hospital capabilities, process automation, and digital pathway optimisation.

Colleagues will need confidence in new ways of working across traditional boundaries as the shift is made to neighbourhood-based working, according to the ICB, with plans to work with partners to create clear pathways for people to start and grow their careers, and to reduce reliance on temporary staff by focusing on development and digital confidence. Providers will be supported to build a “future-ready and resilient” workforce, it notes, equipping staff for digital, virtual, and neighbourhood-based care with strengthened talent pipelines, early career routes, and succession planning by 2029.

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 North West region

Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB plans to procure ambient voice solution

Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB has announced plans to procure an ambient voice/dictation tool to serve a patient population of around 1.6 million people in the region. The ICB aims to use the solution to help “reduce clinical burden, improve documentation accuracy and give time back to patient care”. According to a LinkedIn post by Mark Singleton, chief digital and information officer at Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, it will be the “largest AVT (Ambient Voice Technology) procurement in NHS history”.

The procurement follows a series of pilots and proof of concepts undertaken by different organisations across Lancashire and South Cumbria, with the ICB now looking for one single solution to cover their large population. This forms part of their wider digital strategy to 2029, centred around supporting innovation and progress across all care pathways and facilitating the shift towards prevention.

Cheshire and Merseyside ICB looks to cyber delivery and improvement

The board of Cheshire and Merseyside ICB in a recent meeting focused on cyber security risk, assurance, and improvement activity across the region. While the ICB claims to have established a “strong foundation”, it proposes to refresh its cyber improvement programme to offer a clearer link between strategy, delivery, measurable outcomes, and board assurance, with the next phase to focus on governance and improve consistency in reporting across the system.

Progress to date has included the development of a system-wide cyber strategy, target operating model, and roadmap; the development of an ICS cyber incident response plan with exercises delivered across the organisation; template security policies for ICS adoption; and the completion of skills surveys with training and certifications delivered, it states.

Key deliverables will include confirmed reporting routes and escalation thresholds, set programme milestones and defined completion evidence, cyber requirements built into architecture standards and solution designs, and the identification of critical pathways and suppliers with a dependency map, risk register, supplier assurance outputs, and mitigation plans. A three-day regional cyber incident simulation is scheduled to take place in July 2026, with a post-exercise review to consider lessons learned, an action plan, and updated incident response documents.

Ultimately, Cheshire and Merseyside shares hopes that updated cyber plans will help support the digital foundations required for service transformation and the introduction of AI and productivity tools by protecting underlying data and systems. “Shared systems and interoperable data support integrated care, but also increase shared exposure,” it considers. “Cyber security at system level must therefore be a priority for integrated clinical pathways and platforms. The ICB has clearly defined responsibilities for leading strategic cyber security standards, system assurance and improvement across constituent organisations.”

£11 million funding to launch wearables and remote monitoring innovation cluster in Greater Manchester 

A total of £11.1 million in funding has been committed to the launch of a wearables and remote monitoring innovation cluster in Greater Manchester; a partnership between Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, The University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University, and the NIHR Manchester Health Determinants Research Collaboration. The ambition is to help reduce barriers to innovation in wearable and remote health monitoring technologies by developing a simpler process to bring technologies to the market.

Katherine Boylan, deputy managing director for research and innovation and project lead, spoke of her “excitement” about the cluster, adding: “This will allow us to take these new concepts and test them with our patients to see how this technology can make a difference, and how it can be improved. By removing barriers and attracting investment, this innovation can be accelerated so that new ideas are robustly evaluated and improved upon, putting Greater Manchester at the forefront of a new age of wearable technology in healthcare.”

Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB reports impact of patient engagement portal

A patient engagement portal developed by a team in-house at University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay has reportedly saved close to £3 million, UHMB has shared. The portal is now utilised across Lancashire and South Cumbria ICB, including Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust and Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Its patient engagement portal+ (PEP+) was created by the trust’s Information, Informatics and Innovation (I3) Digital Services Team to offer patients access to their information, provide greater control over appointments, and improve preparation for appointments with digital questionnaires.

NHS in the North West delivers innovation in cancer care

The NHS in the North West has highlighted examples of innovation in cancer care following the publication of the NHS Cancer Plan, with a new virtual cancer ward as part of the Hospital at Home service for Cheshire West and Chester. Community teams are supporting patients at home, with an advanced nurse practitioner from The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre providing specialist oncology support. 

Over a million people seek support from GP online in single month in North West region

Data for the North West region has shown a “sharp rise” in the number of people accessing support from their GP using online forms, with over a million choosing this route of access in a single month in January. This means patients can request appointments or ask questions throughout the day without needing to call or visit, freeing-up practice phone lines, and offering a more convenient route to access care. 

Paula Cowan, local GP and regional medical director for primary care at NHS England in the North West, said: “When speaking to local people about what matters to them most about NHS services, being able to get timely access to general practice services is high up on their list and its high on our list too. Providing additional ways of accessing general practice means it will be easier for people to get in touch with us.  So for those people who like to use online services, having access to online forms will be great for them, but we’ll still be contactable, as always, by other routes too.”