Morecambe Bay plans Lorenzo revamp despite lack of clinician buy in
- 13 February 2017
The first ever “Lorenzo” trust is pushing ahead with a major upgrade, despite reporting āsignificant and fundamental issuesā with the system nearly a decade after it was deployed.
The University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trustās January board papers revealed that among staff there was ānot widespread acceptance and appreciationā of CSCās Lorenzo electronic patient system.
“It does exist but in small pockets of enthusiasts rather than across the board.”
Morecambe Bay was the first trust to install the EPR in 2008, which is now used by 18 trusts.
The trust’s EPR programme report said there were āsignificant and fundamental issues for usersā, many of which were related to “old hardware.”
This included the system going offline after software upgrades, forcing staff had to revert to paper and pens.
Staff also reported frustration with the āspinning wheel of doomā within Lorenzo, where the record would “take a while” to refresh.
To address these issues, there trust has embarked on an āEPR Optimisation Programmeā, moving its Lorenzo 2.10 to a new hardware platform on 26 February.
This will give the trust its āown Lorenzo Instanceā with the CSC data centre that it currently shares with 17 other Lorenzo trusts, the papers said.
āThis is still within the CSC Data Centre but will be āUHMB Onlyā and no longer shared with any other Trustsā.
A CSC spokeswoman said that the company was āworking closelyā with the trust to provide āboth the functionality and performance requiredā.
āAs part of this, their Lorenzo system will be moved to a new hardware platform…They will continue to use the same version of Lorenzo (currently 2.10).ā
The exact timing of the transition would be confirmed with the trust, she said.
āIn the interim, they continue to use the existing Lorenzo āinstanceāā.
Morecambe Bay and Lorenzo have a long and convoluted history.
The trust was the acute āearly adopterā for Lorenzo developed by iSoft, which was later bought by CSC.
The company developed Lorenzo to be rolled out across the North, Midlands and East of England as part of the National Programme for IT (NPfIT). However, after development and deployment delays, Lorenzo went live in only a handful of trusts under NPfIT.
Other trusts has since picked the EPR, most of them as part of a post-NPfIT deal struck between CSC and the Department of Health.
Morecambe Bay gave an early version of Lorenzo a āsoft landingā in 2008, with Lorenzo going live in one ward. It became a key reference site for Lorenzo Release 1.9.
With that national contract due to expire in July last year, the trust went out to tender for a new EPR in 2014. After a competitive tender, trust eventually decided to stick with Lorenzo.
The January board papers said in the next 18 months new functionality would be EPR rolled out. These would include e-prescribing and drugs administration, digital dictation, new integrated theatre scheduling and records system and an electronic link between ECG machines and Lorenzo.
The move to a new infrastructure has been delayed by six to eight weeks because of ātechnical issues identified by CSCā, the papers said.
The papers also identified a āsignificant issueā that any software issues identified within the new system could not be rectified in the live Lorenzo instance until October this year.
Morecambe Bay covers 1,000 square miles with three main hospitals in Barrow, Kendal and Lancaster.
On Thursday the Care Quality Commission upgraded its rating of the trust from “requires improvement” to “good”. Mike Richards, CQC chief inspector of hospitals, described it in a statement as a “remarkable turnaround for a trust that has faced very significant difficulties”.
The trust did not respond to questions before publication.
Digital Health Intelligence maintains a database of the administrative and clinical systems in use at trusts, and uses this to calculate a clinical digital maturity index score for them (log-in required). University Hospitals Of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation TrustĀ has a score of 87 and is ranked 19 (out of 153 acute trusts).