Examples of NHS Connecting for Health in a sentence
The policy is based on guidance from the Department of Health Records Management Code of Practice for Health and Social Care 2016 and the Records Management Roadmap issued by NHS Connecting for Health (now NHS Digital).
Final Report for the NHS Connecting for Health Evualtion Programmes (NHS CFHEP 001) London:Imperial College London [Online] xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxxx.xx.xx/Documents/college- mds/haps/projects/cfhep/projects/001Extension/CFHEP001FinalReport-March2011.pdf [Accessed September 20th 2014] Xxxxxxxxxx, X.X., Xxxxxxx, X., Stroetmann V, Xxxxxx, X.
The Information Governance Statement of Compliance (IGSoC) is “the agreement between NHS CfH and Approved Service Recipients that sets out the terms and conditions for use of NHS Connecting for Health services, including the N3 network, in order to preserve the integrity of those services whether this use is directly or indirectly” (NHS CfH, 2007).
The Statement of Compliance is broader and covers all digital services which NHS Connecting for Health provide.
NHS Connecting for Health have the budget for clinical information systems in prison healthcare centres, and agreed in November 2005 to include it in their overall programme of work.
It is assumed that each partner organisation has achieved or will aim to work towards information security standards such as ISO 27001, compliance with the NHS Connecting for Health Information Governance Toolkit or will adhere to a similar level of compatible security.
The BTS computer System operates in accordance with the Information Governance Policy of the Society, reflecting best practice outlined in the NHS Connecting for Health Good practice guideline for web infrastructure and supporting services and the ISO/IEC 27002 (security standard of good practice).
The ArchetypeCrawler and TermSearcher components feed Archetype information and search results to the ShadowCreator which generates Shadows.In experiments conducted by the authors, the data set is comprised of seven Archetypes from the NHS Connecting for Health Archetype repositories.
However, data within the EPR are extracted from within the clinical systems for analysis within QMAS (Quality Management and Analysis System), a national IT system which shares data between practices and Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) and provides evidence and feedback on quality of care as measured against national QOF achievement targets, making this available throughout the year to both practices and PCTs (NHS Connecting for Health 2010b).
NHS Connecting for Health is supporting the NHS to deliver better, safer care by providing linked computer systems.