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NHS Digital encourages additional information to be shared

Every four seconds a health or care professional accesses a patient’s Summary Care Record (SCR), which contains important details from GP medical records, such as their medication, allergies and adverse reactions, to support care.

NHS Digital said “additional information, including long-term health conditions, medical history and immunisations can also be included in the SCR, if patients give their GP consent to share it.”

James Hawkins, Director of Digital Transformation and Engagement at NHS Digital, which developed the SCR, said: “This is an invaluable tool which 96 per cent of people now benefit from. Uploading additional information to the SCR increases its benefits and enables clinicians to provide the best care possible to patients as they have more details available at their fingertips.

“This also means patients won’t have to repeatedly provide the same information, especially when they are feeling unwell, and this can help save time when health services are busy as well as potentially avoiding unnecessary hospital admissions.”

A new update to the Summary Care Record application, a web-based portal which allows health and care staff to search the NHS Spine for a patient and securely access their information, has made it easier to identify when additional information has been added to an SCR.

Dr Mark Spring, a GP at Sandford Surgery in Dorset and clinical lead for Urgent Care Services, a GP out of hours service, said: “As an out of hours GP, I know the importance of making sure essential patient information can be accessed. My patients don’t just have problems from ‘nine to five.’ They need and deserve high quality, informed healthcare whenever it is required.

“Knowing details of a patient’s medication and allergies is really useful. However, also knowing the reason for the medication and any significant medical history or diagnoses is quite simply invaluable. This is what the SCR can now provide.

“Creating SCRs with additional information is simple and very effective in supporting clinical management.”