North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust, which serves a catchment of 800,000 patients in North Cambridgeshire and South Lincolnshire, found itself with two LIMS when it was formed out of the merger of Peterborough and Stamford Hospitals and Hinchingbrooke Health Care in 2017.
The new LIMS, plus an extension of the ICE order communications and results reporting system to Hinchingbrooke, will bring benefits for patients, staff and GPs by reducing reliance upon paper and delivering faster results to GPs and patients, regardless of where blood samples are taken or tested.
In addition, the new system harmonises working practices and makes it easier for clinicians to view the results of tests taken across the trust’s three hospital sites.
The LIMS and ICE deployments also align with the trust’s digital strategy to integrate a reduced number of IT systems with a new electronic patient record.
Further, the The LIMS and ICE deployments will enable more digital improvement projects and the maturing of the pathology network with neighbouring trusts.
Moving to a new, modern system enables us to improve efficiency at our laboratories and will support the delivery of further projects
Pathology services manager Matthew Smith said: “We had two, old systems from when our trusts merged. Our vision is a single LIMS and a single order communications system, with a harmonised workflow and a single viewer for clinicians, and we have taken an important step towards delivering that.”
“The trust also wants to reduce the number of IT systems that it uses, and we are aligned with that by reducing the number of LIMS we have in use from two to one, and interfacing with other systems, including the electronic records used in maternity and ED,” Smith conitnued.
“Moving to a new, modern system enables us to improve efficiency at our laboratories and will support the delivery of further projects that will bring patient safety and sustainability benefits, by removing paper and plastic from our workflows,” Smith concluded.
The pathology service at Hinchingbrooke was using an older Clinisys product, but the lab at Peterborough and Stamford hospitals was using a legacy system installed around 30 years ago.
The deployment of Clinisys WinPath enables them to benefit from the advances in pathology IT that have been made since then.
The trust’s pathology service is working towards using Clinisys’ data and analysis tools to automatically collect and submit NHS England’s Cancer Outcomes and Services Dataset and to gain more insight into the performance of the labs.
NHS England is encouraging labs to join pathology networks
The go-lives will also enable further projects, including the introduction of bedside labelling on hospital wards that will support pass through numbering, and the removal of paper forms and plastic transport bags required for the blood tests collected by the phlebotomy service and GPs.
The trust is now using the same pathology LIMS platform as one of the other two trusts in the ME-5 pathology network. This achievement will enable greater interoperability across the network.
NHS England is encouraging labs to join pathology networks to improve the efficiency and quality of laboratory services, and using a common LIMS will make it easier for labs to share resources and standardise processes.
Jamie Stephens, project manager at Clinisys, said: “This was an exemplary deployment project, and that was down to excellent communication with the trust -it really felt like we were working as part of a single team.”
“The reaction to the new LIMS and the roll-out of ICE to Hinchingbrooke has been very positive, and it’s good to see that the trust wants to push on and use its new systems to further modernise its pathology services,” Stephens concluded.