NHS Shared Business Services

NHS Shared Business Services (NHS SBS) is a joint venture company in the United Kingdom between the Department of Health (DoH)[1] NHS Business Services Authority (NHS BSA) and the French IT services company Sopra Steria.[2] It provides back office services such as accounting, procurement, payroll and managed IT to NHS organisations.

NHS SBS was formed in 2005 to provide a more efficient method of supplying business services to the National Health Service (NHS); by supplying many trusts it claims to have achieved cost savings of 30% due to benefits from economies of scale,[3] with a target of saving £1bn by 2020.[2]

Loss of patient data

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In February 2017, The Guardian reported that NHS England is holding an inquiry into reports that more than 500,000 pieces of patient data sent between GPs and hospitals went undelivered over the five years from 2011 to 2016, including investigating cases where loss and delay of the data may have harmed patients. The documents are reported to have been mistakenly stored in a warehouse by NHS Shared Business Services, "working as a kind of internal postal service within the NHS in England" until March 2016.[4]

In October 2017, the total number of documents lost was reported to be 864,000.[5]

References

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  1. ^ The Secretary of State for the Department of Health ceased all direct involvement in April 2023, passing their interest to NHS BSA Julian Knight (11 October 2024). "Framework agreement between DHSC and NHS Business Services Authority".
  2. ^ a b Denis Campbell (27 June 2017). "Jeremy Hunt accused of 'sleeping at the wheel' during NHS data loss scandal". The Guardian. Retrieved 2017-10-18.
  3. ^ David Bicknell (2 June 2015). "NHS SBS acquires McKesson Shared Services". GovernmentComputing.com. Retrieved 2017-10-18.
  4. ^ Campbell, Denis; Duncan, Pamela (26 February 2017). "NHS accused of covering up huge data loss that put thousands at risk". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  5. ^ Syal, Rajeev; Campbell, Denis (16 October 2017). "NHS data loss scandal deepens with further 162,000 files missing". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
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