Firm wins NHS intensive care contract worth £13m
Lichfield-based Ascom has won a major contract worth £13 million to develop and manage a national critical care information system for Wales.
Following a public procurement by NHS Wales Informatics Service, Ascom’s Digistat clinical information system will enable intensive care staff across Wales’ 14 standard adult critical care units to manage electronically all aspects of care. Previously, just three of Wales’ units used electronic systems from other suppliers, while the remainder used paper. The new system will transform care digitally and give staff a single source of truth for patient information.
Ascom UK managing director Paul Lawrence said: “We are absolutely delighted to secure this important contract and look forward to working closely with NWIS to ensure a smooth rollout. Our partnership will move critical care units away from paper and on to a system that will make life easier for clinicians, freeing up thinking time in a highly pressurised environment, and provide a single source of truth for patient information. This will not only help improve patient care at the bedside, but benefit audit and research, to refine best practice and critical care structures in the future.”
The Digistat system from Ascom, whose headquarters are at Wall Island, Birmingham Road, will enable ICU staff to record patient assessments electronically, manage prescriptions and drug administration at the bedside, connect with bedside equipment to record vital signs and fluid balance, calculate a patient’s acuity scores, better manage infection control, manage daily care plans, create reports on results and department objectives and support national audit and research needs.
The deal is for seven years with the option to extend for a further three years and includes the end-to-end implementation of Digistat through a managed service contract.
Ascom UK will begin rolling out the technology to The Grange University Hospital in Newport from early next year, followed by a phased rollout to other units until 2023. More than 10,000 people were admitted to Wales’ 198 intensive care beds in 2019.