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How are trusts and health tech suppliers going to find the people they need to develop deploy and optimise critical clinical information systems in the future? Highland Marketing’s advisory board invited Paul Rice from Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust to outline how he has been thinking about the challenge.
The NHS is facing “the worst staffing crisis in its history” according to the Commons health and social care committee. An inquiry led by former health and social care secretary Jeremy Hunt concluded that the service could be short of as many as 50,000 nurses and 12,000 doctors; and the government has no plan to deal with that.
Medical vacancies inevitably command news-site headlines. But it isn’t just doctors and nurses that the NHS needs. As digital, data and information technology systems play a bigger and bigger role in its operations, it also needs people who can build, maintain, and innovate with them.
That will mean recruiting, training, and promoting a new cadre of digital and data professionals. Yet the NHS is likely to face some tough challenges when it comes to doing this.
It is going to be looking for staff from a shrinking pool of young and working age people, as the UK’s natural population ages and demand for its services increase exponentially. And it’s going to be up against stiff competition from international companies with a strong local presence.
At the same time, the NHS will need to make sure that clinical professionals are engaged with new systems and that frontline staff have the digital skills they need to make the most of the innovation coming on stream.
 Paul Rice
NHS IT teams are big teams that require many skills
Paul Rice, the chief digital and information officer at Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Airedale NHS Foundation Trust, has been thinking about these challenges in the context of his own organisation and the West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts.
Specifically, he told the Highland Marketing advisory board, he has been thinking about how to put a team together to implement some big systems (a new electronic patient record for the West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts, and a laboratory information management system for the local pathology network).
“We need a whole range of talents to push and pull in the right order,” he said, indicating that these will range from a chief clinical information officer who can effectively engage clinicians, to a project management office to run the deployments.
Also, from people with the infrastructure and data skills to “keep the lights on” while generating clean information for analysis, to people who can analyse it, to legal and procurement professionals because “we spend a fortune on these systems, and we don’t tend to invest in the specialist expertise that we need to procure them.”
Once he’s got a team together, Rice said he wanted to “avoid the Grand Old Duke of York model” in which “we march everybody up to the top of the hill” for go-live and then let them “depart rapidly at the other side” because “to get the best out of these new tools we will continue to need significant input and expertise to continuously improve and optimise.”
Creating sustainable, meaningful careers
Also, he said, these big projects should be an opportunity to start creating meaningful careers that will attract scarce people and support the local economy. “An EPR contract, a LIMS contract, will run for a decade,” he pointed out, “so we need to attract, develop and maintain a broad base of skilled people for the long haul.
“This offers the prospect of developing genuinely sustainable career pathways because, if you find yourself working in a corridor that covers Airedale, Bradford, and Calderdale for example, you should be able to build and use your skills for a very long time.
“I have been encouraging colleagues to think about creating a ‘Centre of Digital Excellence’, where we can recruit and retain, identify and retrain people on our doorstep.”
While a centre of excellence is still an ambition, Rice has been thinking about the organisations that would need to be involved. He told the advisory board that he has been talking to the universities and further education institutions on his patch and to vendors of consultancy services, accredited skills providers, and digital systems.
“It’s hard for Cerner to support [my trust] from London,” he pointed out. “I would love them to come and work with me in Bradford and to build a resource pool at home in the North. I’d also want to partner with established local businesses with proven capability like TPP who remain central to our ambitions, and they are just up the road. I must go and talk to TPP founder and chief executive Frank Hester about the opportunities.”
Think like an anchor institution
More broadly, Rice said he has been thinking about how digital and data can play a key role in supporting the NHS operate as an ‘anchor institution’. The idea of an anchor institution argues that the sustainability of a large, typically public-sector, institution is tied to the wellbeing and make-up of the population it serves. It can contribute through local employment and procurement.
“Bradford has one of the youngest populations in Europe,” Rice said. “There is just this incredible diversity and richness, and as an anchor institution we need to make sure that we can tap into that and make sure that our communities get opportunities to build good careers locally.
“That means taking seriously the idea that we need to uplift skills – core technical ones, programme management, improvement science, data analysis – with people operating with digital sensibilities at every level of the organisation. And it means getting diverse views in the room, to create those diverse opportunities.”
Education, vendors and trusts all have a part to play
Jeremy Nettle, the chair of the advisory board, asked how much engagement Rice was getting. For example, he asked, were local universities competing to provide the skilled staff that the NHS is going to need?
Rice said he was talking to them and that he hoped Bradford’s success in becoming the UK Capital of Culture in 2025 would increase its profile and appeal further.
Andy Kinnear, a consultant at Ethical Healthcare Consulting, who used to run an NHS commissioning support unit, said he had taken three things from the presentation. “The first is that we should learn something from Covid, and that is the importance of having a single goal,” he said.
“Being able to tell people that they are working on something worthwhile, like improving health in Bradford, should help to drive us forward. The second is the vendor piece. We definitely need to work with vendors so they can give back more to the system, while still making money.
“And the third is specialist skills. I think we need parity of esteem between digital/data skills and clinical or finance skills, because that will help to create career paths with salaries to match.”
Facing a problem? Solve it locally
Neil Perry, the CIO at Dartford and Gravesham NHS Foundation Trust, and James Norman, EMEA health and life sciences director at Pure Storage, were also interested in the development of roles at the top of NHS IT.
Perry noted that some organisations are developing a CAO – or chief analytics officer. While Norman noted that an increasing number of organisations are appointing CNIOs – chief nursing information officers – alongside the more established CCIOs – or chief clinical information officers.
Were these good ideas? Rice said that these roles were all vital and that it was critical to work in partnership with clinical colleagues to better understand workflows and pathways, audit requirements and research aspirations. If he had a concern about CCIOs and CNIOs it was that people take up these roles quite early in their careers, and there needs to be a real commitment to support progression and professional ambition
But, in an ideal world, he’d have all of them: “A CCIO and a CNIO doing clinical engagement, a CIO, a CAO, and also a CTO doing transformation work. I’m looking to engineer some of that in Bradford and Airedale. My own ambitions are to assemble a team of all the talents to deliver the over-arching ambition of higher quality patient care and outcomes, working with patients and communities in a digitally enabled way.”
Digital nurse leader Anne Cooper concluded by asking Rice where other CIOs should start. In response to which, Rice suggested the most important thing is to start.
“So, the first thing is just to carve out some time to understand both the scale of the challenge and the pipeline on your doorstep. Because if Covid showed us anything, it showed us that local matters; and as anchor institutions we should be committed to solving this locally,” he said.
He has been lead for substantial national digital transformation programmes including Programme Director for the Global Digital Exemplar Programme, Director of the Long-Term Conditions programme in Yorkshire and Humber and a policy lead in the Department of Health.
Paul holds a BA degree in Law and Accounting, a Masters in Informatics Leadership and a Doctorate in Medical Law and Bioethics. He is also a Fellow of the British Computing Society, a member of the national CIO Advisory Board and a trustee of Yorkshire Cancer Research.
Lyniate Rhapsody will help enable Northern Ireland on its path to becoming the first UK country with a single, connected electronic patient record
Lyniate, a global leader in healthcare data interoperability, has been selected by the Department of Health in Northern Ireland to provide data integration technologies for its encompass
programme—a national digital transformation initiative designed to improve patient outcomes by better supporting health and care professionals.
encompass, which includes the rollout of Epic to supply integrated electronic health records across Health and Social Care Northern Ireland (HSCNI), aims to create a single digital record for every citizen, with the goal of modernising health and social care in the country. The Department of Health selected Lyniate Rhapsody to integrate multiple health and social care systems containing the electronic records of thousands of patients and service users across Northern Ireland. Rhapsody will go live in 2023 as part of the Epic rollout.
 Erkan Akyuz – chief executive officer at Lyniate
The encompass programme will give patients and service users the ability to view and update their own health information. It will also make it easier for health and social care staff to view important information about their patients and service users across every episode of care.
Lyniate offers flexible, healthcare-focused data integration solutions and support services. Lyniate Rhapsody, which is used in 79 NHS Trusts, provides seamless integration with disparate systems across healthcare organisations, such as the electronic patient record, laboratory information system, and diagnostic imaging.
“Although Rhapsody works in the background, it ultimately helps improve frontline services for clinicians and patients,” said Dan West, Department of Health Chief Digital Information Officer. “While continued efforts have seen staffing numbers across the HSC increase, demand for services continues to outpace that expansion. Interoperability across our information and systems along with the roll-out of the new clinical platform unlocks the potential that exists for digital to play an important role in closing the capacity gap. Having Rhapsody as part of our IT infrastructure will help Northern Ireland on our path to becoming the first UK country with a single, connected electronic patient record. The solution will also help future-proof our IT environment so we can be more cost and time effective for care professionals and service users, enabling us to focus on delivering the safest and highest quality of care to the people of Northern Ireland.”
Erkan Akyuz, chief executive officer at Lyniate, added “We are 100% dedicated to solving healthcare problems and are honoured that HSCNI chose Rhapsody to improve the accessibility of, and trust in, health data as the country accelerates digital healthcare transformation. With Rhapsody, HSCNI can ensure the right data is in the hands of the right people at the right time.”
Headline Keynote Speaker will be Matt Parker, the Stand-up Mathematician
Registration for the UK’s leading data and analytics event open now
Visitor registration has opened for Big Data LDN (London) – the UK’s leading data and analytics event, organised by RX (Reed Exhibitions Ltd). The exhibition and conference will run from Wednesday 21-Thursday 22 September 2022 at Olympia, London. Visitors can register to secure their free ticket now.
The Opening Keynote Speaker has been announced as Zhamak Deghani, who founded the concept of Data Mesh in 2018. Zhamak is CEO and founder of a stealth tech startup dedicated to reimagining data platforms with Data-Mesh-native technologies to get value from data rapidly, sustainably and at scale. In her talk, Rewire for Data Mesh: atomic steps to rewire the sociotechnical backbone of your organisation (21 September, 10:00am), Zhamak will tell the story of what happened before Data Mesh, where we’re heading, and what the future looks like – alongside what is keeping organisations from moving forward, fast. The audience will leave with practical steps to rewiring an organisational brain – behaviour and technology – to make changes toward Data Mesh and move to new heights.
The Headline Keynote Speaker will be Matt Parker, known as the Stand-up Mathematician. Matt has performed sold-out gigs at some of the UK’s most iconic venues. He can regularly be seen talking maths on the BBC and Discovery Channel, and in The Guardian newspaper. Author of Humble Pi, the first maths book to be a Sunday Times no.1 bestseller. His YouTube videos have attracted more than 100 million views. Matt will be delivering the closing Headline Keynote presentation on 22 September at 16:20pm.
Visitors to Big Data LDN will be able to meet face-to-face with providers and consultants from 130 exhibiting organisations, to find solutions to solve their data challenges and deliver an effective data-driven strategy for their business. On the show floor, there will be a feast of opportunities for data professionals to view live demos and get hands-on with the latest product releases and software launches to enhance their capabilities.
More than 200 expert speakers will be in the spotlight across Big Data LDN’s incredible 12 technical and business-led theatres. The extensive and curated conference programme features must-see experts sharing unique stories, peerless expertise and real-world use cases that visitors won’t hear anywhere else. On each of these specialist stages, experts from organisations including Starburst, Snowflake, LNER, Deliveroo, Microsoft, Actian, Confluent, Dataiku and Deloitte will be taking a deep dive into topics ranging from Modern Analytics and DataOps to Data Governance and AI & MLOPS.
The Big Data LDN Keynote Theatre is the centrepiece of the content programme, where subject matter experts will present the latest intelligence and opinion on the industry’s hottest topics. In addition to the foremost speakers in the industry, the keynote track contains remarkable enterprise case studies and transformation journeys from high-profile brands including Parkdean Resorts, VTTI, Checkout.com, KFC UK and Ireland, and Roche Diagnostics.
Also featured will be three must-see Keynote Panel Debates which promise to get ideas flowing and the venue buzzing:
- Data Mesh – what you need to know (Wednesday 21 September, 13:20pm). Featuring Starburst CEO, Justin Borgman; founder of the Data Mesh concept, Zhamak Dehghani; Omar Khawaja, Head of Analytics at Roche; Cindi Howson, Chief Data Strategy Officer at ThoughtSpot; Kevin Petrie of analyst firm Eckerson Group.
- The Great Data Debate (Wednesday 21 September, 16:20pm) – our conference Chair, industry analyst Mike Ferguson, will be joined by leaders from Google, SAP, Select Star, DBT and Snowflake.
- Rise of the Data Engineer(Thursday 23 September, 13:20pm) Simon Whiteley, Director of Engineering with Advancing Analytics, will lead a panel of experts to discuss the dramatic rise in importance of the Data Engineering role, and the newest trends and technology available to help you build a high performing team.
Bill Hammond, Big Data LDN’s Event Director, says: “This year’s Big Data LDN is going to be our biggest yet – the event has doubled in size since 2019. This reflects the astronomical growth of the data sector, as the information an organisation holds plays an increasingly significant role in its ability to innovate, operate efficiently, build the brand, and also stay on the right side of regulations. Our conference programme and exhibitor listings cover every corner of the data industry – from both technical and business perspectives – making Big Data LDN an event that every single member of the team can attend and learn from.”
VENUE: Olympia London, Hammersmith Road, Kensington, London, W14 8UX
DATES: 21 September 2022 | 09:00 – 18:00; 22 September 2022 | 09:00 – 17:00
CONTACT: bigdataldn@rxglobal.com
JOIN THE CONVERSATION: #BIGDATALDN
Exterro FTK Gets Evidence Into the Hands of Investigators Faster Than Ever
 Harsh Behl
Today, Exterro, Inc., the preferred provider of Legal GRC software specifically designed for law enforcement agencies as well as in-house legal, privacy, and IT teams at Global 2000 and Am Law 200 organizations, announced the debut of Exterro FTK® 7.6, which offers the fastest scalable processing engine on the market. The newest update applies to the entire portfolio of FTK products including FTK, FTK® Lab, FTK® Enterprise, FTK® Central, and FTK® Connect, and is purposely designed to assist investigators working at law enforcement agencies, corporate legal departments and ALSP’s.
Offering mobile phone parsing with limitless scalable processing power, FTK can cut through mobile evidence up to 10 times faster, allowing investigators to pinpoint critical evidence, rapidly close cases, and bring criminals to justice sooner. In addition, Exterro FTK Connect can automate and simplify investigation workflows, as well as integrate with cybersecurity platforms (i.e., SIEM and SOAR/XSOAR), case management systems, e-discovery applications, and other third-party software tools including home grown systems. This integration speeds up investigations, from collection to processing to review, and reduces the risk and expense of passing data between platforms.
“The enhancements to the FTK 7.6 portfolio of products are a gamechanger for investigators in the corporate and law enforcement arenas, as they will now have one platform where they can review evidence from mobile devices, computers and cloud data — all in one solution, providing better insights and actionable intelligence into the case,” said Harsh Behl, Director of Product Management at Exterro.
For internal investigations, FTK 7.6 remote agent solutions offer the ability to preview the contents of potentially compromised endpoints that are online but not connected to the VPN. Investigators can view the endpoint’s folder structure, filter for specific file and data types, and view files of interest before performing a collection, all within a Zero Trust infrastructure.
Behl added, “Using Exterro FTK 7.6, forensic and IR teams can build seamlessly integrated lab workflows that power their investigations using best of breed solutions. Our remote triage and IR capabilities accelerate investigators’ ability to resolve incidents in situations where every second counts.”
Exterro FTK 7.6 offers investigators the following new features and functionality:
- Lightning-Fast Mobile Data Processing. Investigators can process information for all types of evidence faster than ever with FTK solutions.
- Providing support for Andorid and iOS operating systems, FTK 7.6 allows the processing and parsing of both mobile and computer evidence in a single database, allowing investigators to find common connection across data sources and cutting through mobile evidence up to 10 times faster.
- As a certified Grayshift Technology Alliances Partner, FTK can fully and accurately import and parse mobile iOS and Android extractions created by GrayKey.
- Industry-first Live Triage of Off-Network Remote Endpoint Data. FTK solutions are essential in securing modern organizations’ remote workforce.
- Examiners can now perform a rapid risk assessment of a suspected compromised endpoint—even if it is disconnected from the VPN network—by previewing the live contents of an off-network endpoint before performing a time-consuming collection.
- Perform faster than ever keyword searching by enabling indexing at the endpoints.
- Complete scalability to meet heavy demand. Exterro FTK 7.6 can scale up to meet the advanced requirements of large labs, case sizes, and case volumes by offering:
- FTK Central’s PostGres compatibility helps organizations of all sizes become processing powerhouses at an affordable cost.
- Advanced SQL configurations offer truly unlimited scalability and reliability. SQL Multi-Server Setup lets you divide case files between servers, while SQL High Availability safeguards against interrupted processing, with one server taking over if another fails.
Exterro FTK 7.6 will be available in early September.
To learn more details about the product, please visit exterro.com/ftk76.
 Lancashire PCC Andrew Snowden
A partnership which aims to reduce crime, tackle disorder, and make our communities safer has celebrated its 30th anniversary.
Lancashire Partnership Against Crime (LANPAC) is a unique collaboration between Lancashire Constabulary, Lancashire Businesses and Public Services working together to reduce levels of crime and disorder across the county.
The Partnership is a registered charity and a company limited by guarantee and its primary role is to support various crime prevention and community safety schemes throughout Lancashire submitted by Lancashire Constabulary employees.
A Board of Directors drawn from our partners in the public, private and voluntary sectors allocate grants to enable employees around the county to operate local crime reduction initiatives that would not otherwise have been affordable.
On average, their work allows one new crime reduction project to begin almost every week – protecting the vulnerable elderly, tackling crime, drug abuse, street robbery and burglary, making people feel safer on the streets and in their homes, as well as providing a wide range of educational services and recreational opportunities to help our young people lead safe, productive lives.
This has resulted in over £4 million being awarded to projects across the county over the past three decades.
On Tuesday (August 23), a celebrating 30 years of LANPAC event was held at Lancashire Police’s Hutton Headquarters, with speeches from LANPAC chairman David Smith OBE, Chief Constable Chris Rowley and Police and Crime Commissioner Andrew Snowden.
 From left to right: Phil Davidson BSc (Hons) MSc MAPM RPP from BAE Systems; Lancashire PCC Andrew Snowden; Wendy Walker QPM, LANPAC Vice Chairperson; David Smith, LANPAC chairman; and Chief Constable Chris Rowley
They were followed by a community safety project supported by LANPAC and the event was closed with a speech from Edwin Booth, executive chair at E.H Booths & Co Ltd.
Mr Smith said: “Our aim is a simple one, to help the Constabulary’s efforts to reduce levels of crime and disorder across the county.
“Over the last 30 years LANPAC has allocated some £4m to fund countless initiatives, some quite small and localised, others with a county wide spread, but all of them directed at making the people of Lancashire feel safe and reassured in their homes and within their local neighbourhoods.”
Chief Constable Rowley said: “LANPAC is a unique partnership which brings the police and key community stakeholders together with the shared aim of reducing crime. The work of LANPAC empowers people of all ages to make a real difference in their communities and, I am certain, has changed many lives for the better.
“We, as a Constabulary, are determined to ensure Lancashire remains a safe place to live, work and visit and the work of LANPAC plays an invaluable role in that.”
Mr Snowden added: “Effective partnership working is a key part of taking the fight to criminals and keeping our communities safe.
“LANPAC is a great example of the difference we can make by working together and, in leading the fight against crime, I will continue to work closely with our partners and stakeholders across Lancashire.”
For more information about LANPAC visit www.lanpac.co.uk/.
Just like every other part of government, local authorities are currently trying to figure out how to help the UK reach its 2050 carbon net zero aspirations. One way of doing this is to encourage more people into electric vehicles (EVs) – but this requires a significant increase in the number of public chargepoints, whether that’s on-street, in car parks, or at retail and leisure destinations.
The Policy Exchange think-tank released a report last year which stated that, to meet the anticipated EV charging demand that the end of petrol/diesel-based vehicle sales will create, we need 400,000 public chargepoints by 2030, compared to the 33,000 that currently exist.
Yet a recent Freedom of Information request by the electrotechnical and engineering services body ECA found that two-thirds of local authorities have no plans for installing public chargepoints, with over a half also claiming that chargepoints were prohibitively expensive to install. And with a sector that’s potentially as volatile and unpredictable as the EV market, forward planning is difficult – where’s the best place to install chargepoints, and how much will they cost?
For the past three years, SP Energy Networks’ Charge Project has been focused on addressing these issues, and in collaboration with its partners EA Technology, PTV Group and Smarter Grid Solutions, has been conducting a series of trials and analyses in the company’s Manweb licence area: Cheshire, Merseyside, North Shropshire, and North and Mid-Wales.
The Charge Project’s key output so far has been ‘ConnectMore’, an innovative free-to-use online EV planning tool that can help local authorities and other stakeholders to both identify the optimal location for chargepoints and get an instant quote for how much it will cost to connect them to the electricity network.
There are two key elements to ConnectMore:
The ConnectMore Interactive Map combines current and future transport patterns with existing network capacity in the Manweb region, and enables informed predictions to be made – covering the period 2025-2050 – about where demand for chargepoints will be highest, as well as identifying where their installation can be accommodated by the electricity network with the minimum need for new cables or equipment.
Once optimal locations have been identified, the ConnectMore EV Connection Cost Estimator can provide immediate estimations of the cost to connect chargepoints to a specific point on the electricity network. By trying out different options regarding the location, ground type, distance, existing demand constraints, potential network reinforcement work, and size of the connection, the tool can be used to identify the most cost-effective chargepoint connection.
John Orr, Design Engineer, SP Energy Networks, and Charge Project Lead, comments: “The ConnectMore Cost Estimator is another significant step forward in fulfilling our mission of accelerating EV chargepoint roll-out. ConnectMore is designed to make this process as quick and easy as possible, from beginning to end. Now, users can go from identifying the best chargepoint locations to getting a connection quote in a matter of minutes. Having budgetary information like this at your fingertips is a major boon when progressing EV charging projects.”
Establishing a ‘business case’ for chargepoint installation is not always easy, and is a major reason why local authorities continue to be put off from investing in public charging infrastructure. Up to now, establishing demand, feasibility and cost has often been too time-consuming and complex a process. This is what the Charge Project – and ConnectMore – is trying to change, by accelerating this process from months to hours.
The EV revolution is coming, and local authorities have to be ready for it. By quickly delivering the hard evidence that’s needed to get projects off the ground, we believe that ConnectMore is a potential game changer for public chargepoint installation, and can also play an important role in helping us all enjoy a cleaner, greener future.
 Solar and wind
A new report from ThermoSphere – ‘Working towards Net Zero’ – sheds light on the attitudes toward direct electric heating in the construction industry, with many preferring it as a means of retrofitting small homes and apartments. Alistair Bell, ThermoSphere’s managing director discusses the mood in construction, and the industry’s opportunity for growth.
Since the UK government set its target of Net Zero by 2050, significant efforts have been made to reduce emissions across the economy. In the construction industry this means decarbonising supply chains, replacing non-renewable energy with renewables, and using low-carbon heating methods.
The most recent Climate Change Committee (CCC) parliamentary report highlighted that to meet the UK’s target of Net Zero, half of the current heat demand for buildings must be supplied by low-carbon sources by 2035.
While the need to change to low-carbon alternatives applies to all UK buildings, residential homes are by far the largest contributor to UK buildings emissions, making up almost 80% of the total.
Against this backdrop, a recent report commissioned by direct heating solutions provider, ThermoSphere, has revealed attitudes within the construction industry towards the decarbonisation of heat and direct electric solutions. The sector sees the need for change, that insulation and low carbon heating are essential, and that direct electric solutions paired with renewable tariffs are a low carbon option.
Priorities first
Decarbonising heat in UK buildings is not a single solution problem. There are several means of reducing emissions that can be used in tandem to reach the UK government’s goals; one size doesn’t fit all. What the ThermoSphere report reveals is that installing low-carbon heating is ranked as the most or second-most important method for reducing carbon emissions by 48% of the construction industry. Above that, efficient insulation is considered to be the top priority by construction industry workers.
As the UK grid incorporates more renewable energy, direct electric heating has become a viable low-carbon heating method for the construction industry. Ultimately it is the electricity grid’s ‘generation mix’ that determines the carbon intensity of any form of electric heating. But, as renewables continue to replace fossil fuels, electricity is becoming a low-carbon source of energy. Pairing a direct electric heating method, such as underfloor heating or electric radiators, with a renewable electricity tariff, will prove to be one of the most effective ways of decarbonising heating in residential and non-residential settings.
There are 29 million homes that need to have low-carbon heating methods retrofitted by 2050, which is one of the main priorities for the CCC. This outlook is shared by the construction industry, with 62% reporting that retrofitting is the biggest challenge to decarbonisation.
The construction industry is prepared to tackle this challenge, and direct electric heating solutions are a preferred method. Direct electric heating is considered a better overall solution by almost half of the construction industry, second to the use of hydrogen boilers. But, importantly, 52% believe that direct electric solutions are the right solution for modest properties and apartments, due to the fact they’re smaller, easy to install, and do not require external equipment that would be difficult to install on multi-storey buildings.
Prices are up, but so is demand
ThermoSphere’s report reveals an increase in consumer interest in low-carbon heating alternatives. But current energy prices are high, and electricity is often unfairly seen to be a more expensive form of energy than oil or gas. 79% of respondents in the construction industry believe that high running costs have deterred customers from installing direct electric heating.
What’s required is a change of image. Too many people have negative associations based on old, outmoded electric heating solutions like storage heaters. 71% of the construction industry believe these older electric heating methods have a negative impact on how consumers perceive modern, low-carbon direct electric alternatives.
This need not be the case. Modern direct electric heating solutions are much more efficient than older solutions, and direct electric is 100% efficient at the point of usage, compared to gas heating where energy is lost throughout the system. They also require lower installation and maintenance costs and won’t be phased about by the UK government over the next 15 years.
Growth and gaps
The construction industry is keen to use low-carbon direct electric heating solutions, particularly in retrofitting older, less spacious buildings, and in multi-storey buildings. But the industry also sees the challenge of retrofitting as an opportunity for growth. 64% of those surveyed believe decarbonisation is an opportunity.
But, as with many areas in the UK economy, there is a skills gap between the currently available talent, and the required talent. 69% of construction workers believe that while there’s an opportunity for growth, there isn’t sufficient workforce expertise to embrace that opportunity. What’s needed is a concerted effort to upskill the current workforce. If the industry can do this sooner rather than later, it won’t miss the chance for growth and it will more easily meet its own decarbonisation goals. As direct electric involves less paperwork and is significantly easier to install, the upskilling requirement will be less onerous for the industry.
Over the coming decades, the construction industry is on track to transform. Heating solution providers that offer viable, low-carbon alternatives can help to usher in that transformation.
For more insights download ThermoSphere’s ‘Working towards Net Zero’ report www.thermosphere.com/working-towards-net-zero-press
A new survey of 885 UK-based retail investors has revealed how investors are managing their portfolios in light of high inflation, low growth, subsequent recession risks and the Conservative leadership contest. It found:
- The majority (62%) of investors believe the UK will enter a recession before the end of the year, irrespective of the outcome of the Tory leadership contest
- Investors showed a slight preference for Rishi Sunak as PM (36%), compared to 31% who favour Liz Truss and 33% who have no preference
- 50% are concerned that interest rate hikes are not enough to tame inflation, posing the biggest threat to their portfolios
- Investors plan to decrease their holdings in crypto (33%), classic cars (44%), private equity (35%) compared to Q1 figures
- Stocks (19%) and gold (12%) are among the most popular asset classes to invest in overall
 Conservative leadership contest
UK investors are bracing for a recession before the end of the year, new research commissioned by HYCM has found.
The trading broker commissioned an independent survey of 885 UK-based investors, all of whom have investments in excess of £10,000, excluding the value of their residential property and workplace pensions.
It found that the majority (62%) believe the UK will be plunged into a recession before the year’s end, despite the outcome of the ongoing Conservative party leadership contest.
With economic policy a divisive factor between candidates, investors showed a slight preference for Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister (36%), compared to 33% of those who showed no preference and 31% who favour Liz Truss for the role.
In the current high inflation, low growth economy, half (50%) showed their concern that the Bank of England’s interest rate hiking cycle will not be enough to stamp out soaring inflation in the coming months, posing the biggest threat to their financial portfolio.
A further 45% expressed their alarm over the prospect that interest rate hikes will dampen economic growth, which they predict will trigger a recession in the next 12 months. That said, 27% of forex investors are looking to increase their FX investment over the next 12 months, as central banks hike their base rates at different paces.
Elsewhere, in the current economic climate, more than half (56%) describe themselves as ‘risk averse’. Meanwhile 38% said that safe haven assets were their prime focus in the current investment landscape.
When asked about their investment strategy for the rest of the year, 33% of crypto investors plan to decrease their investment, up from just 11% in Q1. However, it is also noteworthy that 27% of crypto investors are planning to increase their crypto holdings. This mixed picture perhaps reflects the growing acceptance of crypto as an asset for the medium to longer term.
Meanwhile 44% and 35% of investors plan to reduce their holdings in classic cars and private equity, up from 14% and 11% in Q1, respectively.
On the contrary, stocks and shares were the most popular asset class amongst those surveyed, with 19% overall planning to invest in this asset within next 12 months, with property (14%), social and impact investments (13%) and gold (12%) following closely behind.
Giles Coghlan, Chief Currency Analyst, HYCM, said: “With the Conservative leadership contest gaining momentum, all eyes are falling firmly on economic policy in the bid for the prime minister role. As Sunak warns that the lights are flashing red on the economy and urgent action must be taken to tame spiralling inflation, Truss and her backers are casting doubt on current thinking from the Bank of England (BoE). Whatever course is taken, our research shows that investors clearly view a recession as inevitable.
“Heeding warnings of a five-quarter economic decline, our findings suggest that investors are not only acutely aware of the prolonged impact of the current economic crisis, but they are also questioning the BoE’s mandate on inflation and adapting their portfolios for a difficult road ahead. As the cost-of-living crisis continues to bite, it is therefore unsurprising to see many investors reducing their holdings in some riskier and more speculative assets in favour of those that characteristically provide a safe haven in times of uncertainty.
“However, given that 19% of investors overall plan to invest in stocks and shares and interest in forex remains high it is important to acknowledge that, although subdued, risk appetite is not entirely dead.”
 Andrew Webber, Chief Marketing and Revenue Officer, at Whitespace
New research has revealed that increasing digital collaboration to reduce duplication across government, is seen by public sector organisations as the key to the future of innovation and productivity.
In a survey of over 100 senior leaders and managers, collaboration in the online environment was identified as being vital to their future success, scoring 9 out of 10 for importance.
The survey, conducted by Whitespace, the company behind the Shift collaboration platform, found that over three quarters of respondents said that gaining access to external experts is the best way to open new channels of creativity, bringing developments and services into action faster than a traditional siloed approach, where organisations build new services and innovations in isolation, often without being aware of similar initiatives across different departments.
71% went on to say that external collaboration enables their organisation to be more creative, and to achieve innovative solutions more rapidly. This in turn can spur improved efficiency, delivering more with the current resources they have, whilst concurrently better connecting them with their clients, enhancing better decisions and outcomes.
Conducted to assess the collaboration landscape, and whether current technology solutions deliver to the needs of modern organisations in a digital era, the survey found that public sector bodies are searching for a solution that covers all aspects of collaboration – fitting seamlessly with their existing IT – in order to inspire innovation and new service developments.
Survey respondents said that they are frustrated by the sheer variety of platforms used for productive collaboration, which meant that they spent more time than they would like sifting through communication tools to find content relevant to them. Over 70% said that they found traditional social channels noisy and distracting.
Respondents were clear about the positive difference that a good collaboration platform could make to their work. 70% said that it would enable them to provide quicker results and save time in their workflows and processes, whilst nearly 80% felt they would benefit from the ability to easily find the right person to collaborate with.
In the public sector, accessing the right people to is seen as being invaluable as it enables sharing and learning from best practise. The ability to collaborate easily, online, with experts from other organisations who have achieved particular success with services, provides a straightforward, cost-effective and carbon-cutting way to share learning about what works well between public bodies.
Specifically, 75% of those responding from the public sector, said that their organisation would benefit from collaboration which enabled them to share best practices and to use experts or representatives from other local authorities across the UK.
Andrew Webber, Chief Marketing and Revenue Officer at Whitespace, commented: “The impact of the COVID crisis on the public sector was immense. New ways of working amplified how critical collaboration is among their own staff, as well as externally, in order to provide seamless services. It also brought home the need to have a way to do this digitally and enable collaboration both internally, and with external organisations, in a way that is natural and doesn’t require logging in to multiple tools. Even with the new hybrid way of working, this need to find, connect and collaborate with people in a way that scales, is private, secure and intuitive to use has not gone away.
“The Whitespace team had this need itself during the crisis internally, and where we needed to continue to collaborate with our customers on innovation projects. In talking with those customers, many of them articulated the same need. This customer-led insight is what powered the design and creation of the Shift collaboration platform.”
Designed to enable organisations to conduct work collaboratively, the Shift Platform is available as a white label tool. It empowers any organisation to build safe and secure, curated, and targeted communities. It also enables external individuals and experts to be invited to become part of targeted work groups, minimising noise and focussing on productivity.
Created to provide a one-stop bespoke collaboration portal, The Shift Platform challenges the need for organisations to use the likes of LinkedIn, Microsoft Teams, Slack, Workspace by Meta, and other technologies for the purpose of collaboration.
For more information, and to download the full survey report, visit: shift-platform.com/2022-Collaboration-Report.
A new ability swing for wheelchair users at the new Roman Play Villa in Castle Hill is to be installed as part of Ipswich Borough Council’s commitment to inclusivity.
The ability swing allows wheelchair users to swing alongside a flat-seated swing and so enables side-by-side inclusive play – a key aim of the Council’s Play Area improvements.
This is a new type of equipment for the Council’s Play Areas and follows consultation about a swing to meet the needs of independence and inclusivity. This consultation will continue once the ability swing is installed to ensure that it is the correct piece of equipment, can be used effectively and should also be used at other locations.
The swing is used with a RADAR key. There is also signage and a QR code that leads to a YouTube link to help ensure correct use.
Castle Hill is the first of the Play Areas to be upgraded and with works currently underway. The inclusion of the ability swing will not delay the planned opening of the new park in Autumn 2022.
The cost of the ability swing is being met by the agreed budget for the Play Area and that is part of Ipswich Borough Council’s Play Area Strategy and Action Investment Plan that was agreed by the Council in March 2022.
This Play Area Strategy includes standards for inclusive play areas and the introduction of new equipment suitable for all abilities. including ramp access, ability swings, sensory and quiet play sections as well as colourful and textured areas.
Cllr Phil Smart, Ipswich Borough Council Portfolio Holder for the Environment, says:
“This great equipment has a platform for a wheelchair that enables a child to swing without needing to lift themselves or be lifted into a seat. Their friend can also swing alongside them. As well as helping independence this also makes for a more inclusive experience.
“This is the first swing of this type to be installed in Ipswich in the first Play Area to be improved. The Council’s Play Area Strategy will deliver a timetable of improvements over the next five years and with an emphasis on inclusive play for all ages and abilities.”
For more information about Castle Hill please visit: A new Roman-themed play villa to open at Castle Hill, Ipswich | Ipswich Borough Council
 Katial House
Islington Council has worked with Comelit-PAC to create a cloud based door entry solution for managing access control to communal residential developments across its housing portfolio.
As a leading London Borough Council, Islington has made the transition to a PAC cloud solution across its housing network, delivering improved security for residents.
Initially, PAC pilot tested the system across six blocks chosen by the council’s capital works team. The pilot was successful in working around residents to ensure a seamless transaction of fobs and secure access to communal areas. The works have now been extended to more locations across the borough.
With the ongoing programme, Islington Council is committed to safe and secure housing for residents across the borough. The PAC security system can accommodate the high frequency movement of residents and operators who may need controlled access to communal areas. Overall, the PAC installation offers greater peace of mind and safe audit control.
The London Borough of Islington has been using PAC systems for over 25 years, with the team working closely with technical services from specification to installation, ensuring a seamless transition from the existing standalone system to the smart cloud based solution.
From the borough’s perspective, the remote capability enables a much more efficient approach to managing access throughout our properties, enabling resident instant access, and old resident details can be removed and replaced as necessary.
At the same time, Islington has peace of mind that data captured is secure in the cloud, in compliance with latest standards.
Paul Scott, Sales Manager at Comelit-PAC added: “The benefit of the long term relationship we share with The London Borough of Islington, is that we understand their requirements, from a technical and operational perspective. We also have come to know their processes to ensure resident safety across its housing network.
“The new cloud system enables the Homes and Neighbourhoods team to operate more efficiently, especially with the new focus on hybrid working. It also comes with the assurance that all data is safely stored and backed up, secure and accessible, even remotely when they are not on site. This means they can respond quickly to resident’s needs for new or replacement fobs, and ultimately secure access to their home.”
 Barley Laing
By Barley Laing, the UK Managing Director at Melissa
As public sector services become increasingly accessible online due to the pandemic and improving technology, there has been a corresponding growth in fraud. According to the Cabinet Office fraud and error in public spending are estimated to cost the taxpayer up to £51.8 billion every year, which is larger than the UK’s annual defence budget.
With precious budgets under risk from fraudulent activity, undertaking effective ID verification, behind the scenes in real-time when people sign-up for a service, has become an essential.
Forward thinking public sector organisations are already using identity verification services, such as electronic ID verification (eIDV). These tools deliver cross-checks against an individual’s contact data in real-time, as they complete an online application process, whilst ensuring the user experience isn’t compromised.
Clean data powers ID verification
While undertaking ID verification will remain vital, the cost of it can be reduced and fraud will much less likely to occur for those that have ongoing processes in place to ensure data hygiene. For example, address validation, for proof of address, is about matching a name to an address, and is a crucial part of the data hygiene process. It highlights those who provide an inaccurate address, whether that’s because of a typo or they have entered an inaccurately formatted address, which then can be easily corrected. It also flags those who are providing an address they are not associated with, therefore potentially providing an inaccurate address for fraudulent purposes.
Because ID checks will pick up rudimentary things, such as an incorrectly formatted address, it’s much better value and best practice to ensure you have accurate user contact data in the first place, prior to undertaking ID verification.
A data hygiene first approach is not only important for identity verification. Accurate data on users also enables the public sector to obtain valuable insight, such as a single customer view (SCV). This insight can be used for better targeting, including personalisation with communications.
Unfortunately, 91% of organisations have common data quality problems, with user contact data degrading at 25% a year without regular intervention. Also, 20% of addresses entered online contain errors, such as spelling mistakes, wrong house numbers and incorrect postcodes.
The good news is incorrect contact data, such as name, address, email or telephone number, can be easily fixed, often with simple and cost-effective changes as part of their data quality regime. This should involve cleansing and standardising held user data to deliver data quality in batch, as well as when new data is collected, in real-time. The cleansing tools used in this process should be able to enhance the data by filling in any missing contact details.
Four steps to clean databases:
- When it comes to the data cleansing process one of the most useful tools for the public sector is an address autocomplete or lookup service, which enables address validation. These can gather accurate address data in real-time at the onboarding stage – vital during a period when many people are completing contact forms on small mobile screens where they are more liable to make mistakes. They also enable those in the public sector to deliver a standout service by reducing the number of keystrokes required—by up to 81 per cent—when typing an address. This speeds up the onboarding process, reducing the probability of the user not completing an application or making a purchase.
- Duplicate data of those on your database can be an issue. It’s commonly caused when two departments merge their data and by mistakes in contact data collection at different touchpoints. This adds cost in terms of time and money, particularly with duplicate printed communications, which can also adversely impact on the sender’s reputation. The recipients will see this as a waste of public money, at what is a challenging time for public sector finances. To prevent this, source an advanced fuzzy matching tool to deduplicate data. By using such a service, and merging and purging the most difficult records, you save money with communications and improve the user experience.
- Data suppression strategies help those in the public sector highlight people who have moved or are otherwise no longer at the address on file. As well as removing bad addresses, services that include deceased flagging ensure mail and other communications are not sent to those who have passed away, upsetting their friends and relatives. It’s not only ethical to use these suppression strategies, but it also helps public bodies to save money and protect their reputation.
- Once you’ve deployed the basics to ensure accurate customer data, artificial intelligence (AI) can add even greater value to the data you hold. For example, a type of machine learning called semantic technology can readily deliver high value, in-depth intelligence on users of your services. Semantic technology, or semtech, associates words with meanings and recognises the relationships between them. It operates by delivering powerful real-time connections between records, combining the missing pieces of data to support an informed decision about the content of a communication to a user.
A data hygiene first approach is vital for ID verification. It’s only by having clean data that you can effectively, and at low cost, undertake identity verification, and reap the additional benefits of having accurate user data, such as improving targeting and delivering a better experience for those using your services.
For more information about Melissa and how our data quality and ID verification services can help you not only clean your data but prevent fraud, please visit: Melissa, email: barley.laing@melissa.com or call: 020 7718 0070.
Ransomware has long been a menace and has even led to some referring to it as the digital plague of our time. The constant barrage of cyberattacks in the last few years has raised concerns, particularly for organisations that must get to grips with the tactics used by threat actors trying to gain access to their networks.
Cybercriminals have no remorse for their victims so long as they get their ransoms paid. According to one report, the average ransom demand increased by 144% in 2021 to US$2.2 million, while average payment rose 78% to US$541,010. This just goes to show how lucrative and effective ransomware can be.
But what is causing these organisations to fall victim to ransomware? Looking into the top causes for ransomware, KnowBe4 revealed social engineering to be the most successful vehicle for hackers to dupe victims. Social engineering involves cyber threats like phishing via email, smishing via text message, vishing over the phone, or a combination of any of these tricks to get employees to click on a malicious link. We have even seen examples of employees being offered bribes to install ransomware.
Now, there is no silver bullet in cybersecurity that will magically prevent all these threats. You cannot just throw money at technology alone to try fix the problem. Organisational policies and procedures need to bake in security. The most important strategy that needs to be adopted is to develop and increase user awareness of ransomware threats which can help create an added layer of security for the organisation.
Do not rush; security takes time
It can be difficult to trust the process of building security awareness. It can feel like an obstacle that could be avoided by investing in just security technology. Yet, decision-makers have to realise that a positive security culture is an enabler for business operations. Without this element, you will be left vulnerable. It cannot be viewed as a “nice to have” feature or an afterthought just to tick a compliance box. 
Dedicating even a small amount of time in a week for security awareness training can make a difference. Having the workforce learn from a variety of resources and tools about security policies, best practices and tell-tale signs of ransomware, and other threats, will help.
People are just as important as the tech
Empower your employees with the right knowledge to make a difference. Within the organisation, they should be viewed as security enablers who can be an integral part of any security program. Do away with the stigma that they are the chinks in the security armour, as this only happens if they are not properly trained.
Security training can be inexpensive and does not need to eat into the security budget, as there are plenty of free or cheap resources to aid security teams in getting the message across. Better yet, these resources come in a variety of formats, from videos and quizzes to checklists and articles. There are even security policy templates that can be downloaded for free. All it takes is a quick search on the internet. Yes, these may be basic or rudimentary and may lack the glamourous features if you were to purchase a subscription with a vendor, but it can definitely help form a foundation of security awareness to build from.
Free tools are available
As mentioned, organisations of all sizes should utilise the free security training tools available to better prepare the workforce against ransomware and other cyber threats. For instance, try ransomware simulators to test the preparedness of the business, assessing how the team would manage such a scenario. Look at password checkers that are widely available for free to see the security effectiveness of the passwords being used in the organisation. There is a plethora of free security hygiene and best practice modules that cover all these areas and more. You can even get security vendors to provide free security consultations with free scans of the network and infrastructure to flag the biggest risks. Yes, a sales call may be required, but having this conversation can save you both on costs and resources, while making you more secure.
Ransomware is a huge issue and there are no signs of it slowing it down so long as it is effective, and since criminals are seeing a return on their investment, it will be here to stay. Thankfully, there are options – some of which are free – to help organisations reduce the risk of being impacted. Make security a business priority and give the workforce the knowledge and ammunition to defend against these social engineering threats.
To give you and your organisation a head-start, KnowBe4, the provider of the world’s largest security awareness training and simulated phishing platform, has created a resource kit as part of a month-long effort in July to increase awareness of ransomware. Some of the resources for download include a Ransomware Master Class, Ransomware Rescue Manual, infographics, posters, digital signage and more.
To download the KnowBe4 Ransomware Awareness Month Resource Kit, visit www.knowbe4.com/ransomware-resource-kit?hs_preview=jWLYMIeR-76301550774
South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has taken the next step in its modern, modular electronic patient record (EPR) programme with Alcidion, having gone live with electronic prescribing and medication administration (ePMA) system Better Meds.
The trust has deployed Better Meds to inpatient and outpatient areas, where it is already removing paper forms and manual processes, as well as helping busy healthcare professionals to make safe prescribing decisions.
The ePMA solution fully integrates with Miya Precision, Alcidion’s EPR, which is being deployed across the trust to advance digital maturity in ways that respond to clinical priorities and alleviate pressures faced by clinicians. The trust has also simultaneously gone live with electronic discharge notification functionality within the Alcidion Miya Precision system.
Daniel Pugh, a senior informatics pharmacy technician for South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said: “There is a lot of excitement across the trust about the possibilities from this ePMA implementation, and other digitisation taking place in South Tees Hospitals.
“Integrating electronic prescribing into our Alcidion EPR, joins up drug information with patient assessments, allergies, lab results, vital signs and more. This provides a safety barrier that will help prescribers make better informed decisions for patients. It will also save valuable time for clinicians, for example, through easy access to standardised order sets and the ability to prescribe from anywhere.
“Electronic discharge will also become much easier for doctors. Rather than having to manually transcribe medicines, staff just open a discharge letter in Miya Precision, and all the drugs for a patient appear. This reduces the risk of errors and represents an improvement in patient safety.”
The trust will now benefit from a better audit trail of every medication dose administered, and staff across wards will gain easier visibility of when medicines are due for patients. “Some medicines require administration within a strict timeframe, for example, drugs related to Parkinson’s disease,” said Pugh. “We will be able to monitor that and many other scenarios. Trend analysis will allow us to easily identify any potential issues early so we can act swiftly and provide more resources to a ward when needed.”
Codified data will also support the trust in financial reporting, so that it can more easily link medicines to specific patients and reclaim money that can be reinvested into patient care.
The ePMA implementation epresents an important step on the trust’s journey through stages of the HIMSS Electronic Medical Record Adoption Model. A whole range of additional functionality will complement the go-live as the trust continues to progress its deployment of Miya Precision.
Dr Andrew Adair, chief clinical information officer, at South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said: “E-prescribing is the latest important step on our modular EPR journey, that is allowing us to move at pace towards the highest levels of digital maturity through technology that people want to use.
“Better Meds is highly synergistic with our Alcidion Miya Precision system – and will integrate closely with e-noting, e-observations, patient flow journey boards and more, in ways that reduce the cognitive load for clinicians by making information useful and supporting clinical decisions. Responsibility for prescribing decisions still rests with the clinician, but they will no longer need to manually manage every detail and every process about medicines, conflicts and interactions, guidance and more.”
Roko Malkoč, business unit director, Better Meds, added: “South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has shown high digital transformation maturity, resulting from the excellent internal alignment driven by an experienced team. We believe that collaboration with Alcidion in the trust will bring direct benefits with real-time access to all healthcare data for caregivers. Both encourage us to follow our vision of medication management without errors.”
This deployment represents the first NHS trust to implement an ePMA module as part of an Alcidion EPR programme.
Lynette Ousby, UK managing director for Alcidion, said: “Digitisation in healthcare should be about using technology to respond to clinical and operational priorities in the right order for NHS customers. In this case, e-prescribing will help staff to safely get the right medicines to the right patient, at the right time. South Tees Hospitals is a strong example of a trust that is delivering technology to respond to the needs of its clinicians. Doing that effectively requires flexibility from technology providers and a willingness to work together. It’s really rewarding to see the benefits of a modern, modular approach to digitisation working so well in practice.”
Kate Quirke, CEO for Alcidion, said: “I’m impressed by the speed at which South Tees Hospitals is progressing its digital journey, and by the enthusiasm for digital transformation at all levels of the organisation. I look forward to seeing the impact of this latest stage of the trust’s programme, and to further developments in the near future.”
By Chris Hornung, Managing Director of Public Sector Business at Totalmobile
In recent months, there’s been a lot of hot debate about how the Metaverse is set to transform how we work, play, shop, socialise, transact, and more.
Featuring the confluence of multiple technologies including 5G, artificial intelligence (AI), the internet of things, blockchain, virtual and augmented reality, 3D graphics, machine learning, VR-enabled headsets, and quantum computing, the Metaverse aspires to provide highly immersive and embodied online experiences. So far, so good. But what does all this marketing speak really mean?
Essentially, the Metaverse builds on ‘old school’ digital gaming concepts to enable highly responsive virtual and augmented reality spaces where users can virtually meet, work, learn – and potentially gain access to public services.
Indeed, according to Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder and chief executive of Meta (aka Facebook), the Metaverse is “an embodied Internet where you’re in an experience, not just looking at it.” If you’ve seen the film The Matrix, you’ll have some understanding of the scope and ambition of the Metaverse vision: a virtual digital world in which people can live out their daily lives via avatars.
If that all sounds a bit like far-fetched science fiction, then think again. Because the art world is already experimenting with NFTs (non-fungible tokens) that represent a unique digital representation of a work of art. Indeed, many art investors are betting that NFTs will revolutionise how art is viewed, owned, and traded.
From fiction to fact – going beyond the hype
For the past two decades, the online gaming world has been pushing forward the boundaries of what is possible where gamification, immersive virtual experiences, and alternative worlds are concerned. However, recent developments in super computing – combined with digital blockchain and decentralised Web3 technologies – are now set to unlock the true potential of Metaverse platforms. Delivering a new era of real-time interactive 3D digital human experiences and simulations that go far beyond how we interact virtually today.
Unsurprisingly, big tech and gaming companies are hoping to play a leading role in shaping the Metaverse future while capturing a market lead in what’s hotly anticipated to be the ‘next big thing’. Indeed, it’s the reason why Facebook took the decision to rebrand itself as Meta in 2021.
But with so much being written about Metaverse potential use cases, to all practical intents the Metaverse today remains very much a clunky ‘work in progress’. Plus, there has been much debate about whether consumers will be ready and willing to interact, transact, and participate in these eagerly anticipated new digital ecosystems.
One thing is for sure. Alongside addressing a lot of tech-related interoperability challenges, kickstarting the mass take up of the next generation of Metaverse experiences will be dependent on the development of new legal frameworks and regulatory rules that will protect users in these virtual worlds. Unsurprisingly, issues like user privacy, data protection, digital ID, ethics, and cybersecurity are all top concerns, especially where children and young or vulnerable adults are concerned.
Which is why agencies like the UK government’s Digital Catapult are bringing together key stakeholders from industry, academia, and regulatory authorities to examine how best to support Metaverse innovations, while ensuring that ‘safety by design’ standards are embedded into Metaverse platforms and technologies.
Think evolution, rather than revolution
For government and public sector organisations, the Metaverse can seem like a significant leap from a service delivery perspective. The good news is that there’s no need to decide whether or not to buy a Metaverse ticket and get on the train right now. However, being aware of the technologies and products that are set to shape the future of UK digital service delivery is no bad thing.
In the past two years, government and public sector organisations have undergone rapid digitalisation that’s transformed service delivery and citizen/user interactions. In parallel, many organisations have begun experimenting with powerful virtualisation and cloud distribution technologies to deliver new immersive experiences in a variety of fields – think online digital exhibitions and arts catalogues, or digital twins and learning and digital skills programmes.
In the future, chatbots and virtual digital assistants that are now everyday features of contact and support centres may be supplemented by online virtual assistants that ‘meet’ and help service users in the Metaverse. Meanwhile, remote employees can literally meet colleagues in the Metaverse or join virtual immersive representations of their workplace/office.
Providing a potentially rich opportunity to enhance communication and engagement with citizens and service users, the Metaverse is a book that’s waiting to be written. Offering the potential to revolutionise healthcare, education, tourism, smart cities, social and political engagement, and more, initially most organisations will first look to harness the benefits of the Metaverse to enhance traditional processes and improve citizen centricity. After which, the deployment of universal digital platforms that support individuals and commercial entities in new and highly distributed ways may see the Metaverse expanding in new and unexpected ways.
Transparency, cost control and fulfilling short notice staffing requirements in as little as 1-2 hours are just three of the main benefits City of Cardiff Council has accomplished since it started working with recruitment technology business Matrix in 2016.
Matrix, which specialises in the procurement of temporary, interim and permanent staffing solutions, provides a neutral vendor managed service and end-to-end process in one complete platform, allowing clients to take control of their recruitment with full visibility.
“Matrix delivers a neutral vendor managed service provision which supports the Council with transparency, cost control, short notice requirements and many other benefits,” says Shauket Ali, category manager, City of Cardiff Council. “Since going live with Matrix, they have delivered savings and efficiencies while managing £26m annually for the authority.”
Prior to awarding the contract to Matrix, the City of Cardiff Council felt a lack of support from the previous incumbent – there was no guidance through the ordering process, no support with cost control and an inability to meet short notice requirements. This resulted in a lack of faith from Hiring Managers, which resulted in poor attendance of training sessions.
To overcome these challenges, Matrix ensured that the Council received the best support available during implementation of the new solution and has consistently been working to improve processes, which included the systemisation of placement extensions. It also provides real-time reports with a detailed cost breakdown.
Working in partnership with Cardiff Council meant that Matrix was able to achieve full buy-in from the Hiring Managers, providing extensive training to Hiring Managers as well as an onsite Account Manager to assist them with any requests or issues they faced. Through this service, it has been able to introduce savings to the council and provide them with high quality workers – meeting any short notice requirements through its cr.net platform.
In the previous 12 months, Matrix has transacted over 21,000 hours within the hospitality/operations category at Cardiff Council, delivering a 99% fulfilment rate – sometimes in as little as 1-2 hours. It also delivers a number of shift workers with over 40% of Cardiff Council’s annual spend within more low skilled workers and operational shift cover – which are often required within a 24 to 48 hour time period.
Since partnering with Matrix, the City of Cardiff Council has been able to achieve a 99.3% fulfilment rate and £5.7m (4.1%) in cost savings. The number of placements created have consistently outperformed the number of orders raised over the past six years.
“Working in partnership with the City of Cardiff Council, we were able to overcome the initial hurdles and restore faith among key stakeholders with the implementation of our system,” says Ian Middleton, national business director at Matrix. “By streamlining the process through our software we are able to provide transparency, real-time reporting, cost savings and a fast fulfilment rate.”
Ian Hogan from the Northern Care Alliance and Neil Perry from Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust have joined the forum that debates the big issues facing health tech and seeks to spread innovation for the future
Two of the NHS’ most dynamic chief information officers have joined Highland Marketing’s advisory board of NHS IT professionals and health tech industry experts.
Ian Hogan, a CIO at the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust and Neil Perry, the director of digital transformation at Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust, have joined the expert group that acts as a discussion forum for issues relating to digital health and provides advice to the agency and its clients.
 Ian Hogan
Hogan said he was looking forward to joining the board’s regular debates, which range widely over NHS IT policy, technical developments, and enablers such as tackling digital inequality.
“Highland Marketing has found a really interesting group of people to sit on its advisory board, and I’m looking forward to hearing their views on the challenges that NHS IT is facing,” he said.
“We need new voices with new ideas in health tech, and I believe the advisory board is committed to finding them. When I was invited to join, it seemed like a great opportunity.”
Perry said he was looking forward to drawing on the advisory board’s combined experience of NHS IT developments and deployments, and its interest in innovation.
“One of the big challenges in NHS IT is the need to balance the deployment of familiar technologies with seizing the opportunities presented by innovation, whether that’s AI, or remote monitoring using the latest wearables,” he said.
“I think the advisory board gets that, which makes it an interesting forum for discussing the hard reality of some aspects of health tech policy and the exciting future that could be ahead of us if we can get this right.”
 Neil Perry
Hogan has worked in healthcare technology in the North West since mid 1990. He joined what is now the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust in December 2019, and works across its digital portfolio.
Perry has also worked in healthcare technology for around 25-years, but in the South East of England, where he has worked on traditional ‘single system’ electronic patient record developments and on alternative approaches.
He joined Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust in 2007 and, as director of digital transformation, is working to deploy Alcidion’s open platform and Patients Know Best as the foundations for a modern, modular EPR that can layer in innovation.
Jeremy Nettle, the chair of the Highland Marketing advisory board, said: “It’s great to welcome two, new CIOs to the board. Ian and Neil are taking very different approaches to digitising their organisations, but they both have great experience and commitment to delivering for their users.
“I am looking forward to hearing the fresh perspective that they will bring to our discussions and to giving them a voice in the wider industry.”
Susan Venables, founder and client services director at Highland Marketing, said: “Highland Marketing is a specialist health tech marketing, PR and communications agency. Health tech is all we do, so we have a deep commitment to finding ‘health tech to shout about’ and to communicating it to the people who need it.
“The advisory board has become an important forum for shaping our work, so I’m very grateful that Ian and Neil have chosen to join us. I’m also looking forward to hearing their views about the digital future that we all want to see.”
NCC Replaces Paper and Spreadsheets to Digitalise Facilities Management Across 89 Buildings and Over 40 Schools
Northumberland County Council, serving over 2,000 rural square miles, has completed a successful pilot and is now deploying field service management solutions from Totalmobile to digitalise its facilities management (FM) operations and link the FM business unit with other council services.
Scheduling, job management and mobile solutions from Totalmobile are being rolled out to manage audits, property checks, and reporting. This will enable a single point of information in the form of a dashboard, which will enable management teams to view a complete service picture at any given time.
Prior to the pilot scheme, the recording of building checks took place on paper and were recorded in spreadsheets and logbooks. Checking the status often required physical on-site visits. The new solution will enable full visibility of all FM operations such as fire safety checks, lift checks, and Covid cleansing, and enable greater transparency of performance, underpinning critical decision making.
Susan Treadwell, Interim Facilities Manager at NCC said: “We chose Totalmobile as we wanted one solution for all services, a solution that worked offline, removed duplication, and had the ability to capture photographic evidence.
“We run facilities management across a vast rural area. It is vital that we meet health and safety regulations and requirements, and buildings are properly maintained in the most time- and cost-efficient ways. 
Northumberland has been a Totalmobile customer for other service areas for over six years. It currently uses the technology within nine different service areas including neighbourhood services, property services, social care, fire and rescue, housing, and election services to work offline, remove duplication and have the ability to capture photographic evidence.
Chris Hornung, MD Public Sector at Totalmobile said: “We are seeing an increasing demand for field service intelligence technologies that improve community experience, simplify compliance, and, ultimately, provide a better service across all areas of a local authority. The wide variety of services that NCC is using Totalmobile across reflects the service, quality and significant benefits that field service management software can deliver. ”
 Julian Boneham
By Julian Boneham, Technology Practice Director – Data, at Node4
Following the biggest year of UK electric vehicle (EV) consumer market sales and the COP26 climate conference, 2022 is set to be a defining year for EVs.
Backed by the UK government’s ambitious emission-free measures, and a £1,500 plug-in-car grant for new EV car purchases, the EV market is booming in the UK. Last year saw EV car sales increase by 76% and, according to the UK automotive trade body The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), electric cars are projected to outsell diesel models by the end of 2022.
As the UK prepares itself for the 2030 ban on new petrol and diesel vehicle sales, followed by a further proposed ban on the sale of new hybrid vehicles by 2035, investment in the UK’s charging infrastructure is ramping up fast to cope with the anticipated demand that will go way beyond the estimated 400,000 EVs and more than 750,000 plug-in hybrids on the road today.
In the coming years, the public charging network will need to be upscaled radically to ensure an appropriate level of infrastructure is in place to support current and future EV car owners.
A sizeable business opportunity
With just over 20,000 charge points in the UK at the end of 2021, the Committee on Climate Change (CCC) estimates that, by 2030, 325,000 public charging points will be required to support the needs of EV drivers.
Alongside providing fast charge options at petrol and service stations to meet the requirements of those on long-distance journeys, the CCC has identified a growing need for public ‘top-up’ charging facilities in public parking spaces. Plus, a growing number of drivers that are unable to charge their vehicles at home, for example, if they live in flats, will need certainty that they can easily access a public charging network.
All of which creates new opportunities for supermarkets, shopping centres and other businesses for whom the provision of public chargers would help attract customers and demonstrate a businesses’ green credentials. Similarly, local authorities may also want to install chargers in the car parks they operate and in residential streets with available parking.
With demand set to grow exponentially, improvement in the EV support infrastructure is becoming a critical focus area and providers are jostling for position. EV charging service providers that make it possible for EV drivers to plug and charge their vehicles from different charging networks are growing, as are schemes featuring subscription services, apps and membership cards.
This means that the infrastructure that is put in place will need to support drivers, regardless of which scheme they are – or are not – a member of, to ensure that drivers can use any and all types of charger. But that’s just the start.
The top 3 critical criteria for EV charging infrastructures
The EV industry has a way to go to reassure prospective vehicle owners that they can effectively charge a vehicle in a single stop. With a variety of charging choices on offer, the supporting technology for app and charging services must fulfil three vital criteria. Today’s consumers will expect to encounter public charging services that are seamless, reliable and secure.
1. Service availability – trust is a key element for EV drivers, many of whom are making their first venture into this new territory. Drivers will not tolerate apps that aren’t seamless or always available, so any charging technology that is deployed will need to be highly available 24/7/365 days a year. To ensure this, service providers must host core IT in highly available environments that can provide at least 99.99% uptime and 24×7 support to ensure they can remedy any customer issues and maintain brand reputations.
2. Technology performance – speed of charging represents a key competitive differentiator but EV infrastructure providers often experience service performance lags whenever they outgrow their initial IT set-up. These slow charging times, combined with problematic apps, can lead to customer and market share losses. To deliver better service outcomes, infrastructure providers should look to tech partners that are able to undertake a consultative audit that will ensure their core IT infrastructure is able to meet current and future needs. Recommendations are likely to include improved data integration and analytics, overhauling connectivity, or hosting apps in the cloud to ensure services are fit for purpose and scalable.
3. Resiliene – EV infrastructure supporting technology needs to be adaptable enough to cope with evolving market demands. To ensure this, the technology roadmap needs to feature data analytics that will deliver intelligence on key customer behaviours and preferences. For example, harvesting data from the customer app to understand how often and where they charge their EV. Keeping pace with these changes will ensure the right decisions relating to future technology investments can be made.
Finding the right digital transformation partner
Navigating the complexity of new technologies and developments means working with an experienced technology partner that has in-depth knowledge of digital transformation.
The rapid scaling and operational evolution of the EV market means that it is vital to ensure that technology partners have experience working with similar organisations and proven capabilities when it comes to knitting a number of different technologies together to build solutions that can cope with demand peaks and troughs.
The supporting technology for your infrastructure must be highly resilient with optimised connectivity and exceptional support and managed services built-in. Look out for technical accreditations, such as Microsoft Expert MSP Azure accreditations for a hybrid cloud environment and the best possible levels of vendor support escalation and alignment.
Ensuring your transformation partner is ahead of the game in terms of the technology landscape will also be critical. For example, partners that are specialists in areas such as data and automation will be more likely to deliver an infrastructure that is optimised for future workloads. Ultimately, a partner that can provide real-world expertise to help determine the optimal location for applications – private infrastructure or public cloud – is just part of the puzzle. Today’s providers will have to contend with ever-increasing volumes of data which creates an opportunity for modern data platforms that enable more advanced analytics.
Working with a partner that has experience in secure hybrid and public cloud platforms and advanced data management services will ensure you’re able to make the most of your modernisation technology investments.
Security accreditations aligned to your risks
The charging ecosystem is a complex one that includes interfaces between vehicles, charge station service providers, banks and payment platforms. This makes them attractive to malicious actors looking to steal personal information and skim payment information. Indeed, all these ‘customer’ touchpoints represent potential vulnerabilities that make EV market suppliers key ransomware targets.
To ensure security is built into all IT services, your tech partner’s security credentials will need to be top-notch. To minimise risk, ensure that your partner has a mature Security Operations Centre (SOC) in place, with accreditations for data protection, regulatory compliance, payment processing, cyber threat prevention and disaster recovery.
Driving towards an optimised and forward-looking future
In the coming months and years, the EV infrastructure will expand at pace. Providers working in this arena will need a specialised, dependable and forward-thinking infrastructure that will successfully navigate change, remain secure and grow.
Those providers that are able to form strong technology partnerships will be best positioned to robustly enable and support the forecourt charging technologies and customer applications that will underpin operational and commercial success in a sustainable and highly secure manner. As business models continue to evolve, and more dynamic systems come into play, those that can adapt fast and offer seamless customer experiences will be best placed to win the day.
An independent review into the response to COVID-19 in Walsall has shown that partnership working was a dominant feature, essential to meet the challenges that were presented to the community during the pandemic.
The review conducted by the Institute for Community Research and Development at the University of Wolverhampton describes how Walsall’s partnership approach enabled people and resources to be mobilised quickly, setting aside organisational boundaries to support and protect Walsall’s most vulnerable residents.
The review highlights strong and effective leadership from Walsall Council. It describes how at the beginning of the pandemic the immediate response by the Council was to establish two senior management officer groups which met on a daily basis. Gold Command coordinated the strategic operational response across the Borough. The tactical component of the response was located in Silver Command, which determined operational issues at a local level.
Dr Helen Paterson, Chief Executive of Walsall Council, said, “It is really important that we learn from our experiences during the pandemic. This review helps us to capture the real essence of the vital activity that was delivered by ourselves and by our partners.
“Like other Councils across the country, we have faced unprecedented challenges over the last two and a half years. This report shows that effective leadership, a spirit of shared endeavour and a shared sense of purpose amongst our partners were all critical to mitigate the impact of the pandemic on people living in Walsall.”
The review sets out how many Walsall Council services were quickly adapted to be provided online during lockdowns. Council sites were made COVID-secure and more than 300 items of IT were issued to enable more Council employees to work remotely to sustain front line services.
It goes on to describe that many elected members of the Council offered crucial and significant leadership and visibility within their communities.
Stephen Gunther, Director of Public Health, said, “The review sets out how together Walsall responded. We worked collaboratively from the beginning of the pandemic. We built on relationships that were already in place and created new partnerships which I am eternally grateful for. COVID-19 hasn’t gone away, and we still have work to do to ensure that we engage with all of our communities in the most effective way to protect residents from the virus and from any future crises that we may face.”
The review highlights that the response to the pandemic evidenced multiple examples of agile, innovative and resilient local governance in the face of a crisis. It details the challenges that were experienced in engaging with Walsall’s diverse and socioeconomically disadvantaged communities and the important role played by Community Associations.
Data for the review, which was commissioned by Walsall Council, was collected at the beginning of this year from a series of in-depth interviews.
Learning from this review will help to ensure that multi-agency work is further developed in Walsall to support the response to future crises.
To read the full review go to: www.wlv.ac.uk/media/departments/research/icrd/22.-COVID-Review_Final-Report_July-2022.pdf
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