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National neonatal data to support specialist care and improve infant outcomes
  1. Andrew Spencer1,2,
  2. Neena Modi3
  1. 1NHS Information Centre, Leeds, UK
  2. 2Neonatal Unit, University Hospital North Staffordshire, University Hospital of North Staffordshire Trust, Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, UK
  3. 3Neonatal Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr S A Spencer, The NHS Information Centre, 1 Trevelyan Square, Boar Lane, Leeds LS1 6AE, UK; andy.spencer{at}doctors.net.uk

Abstract

‘Liberating the NHS’ and the new Outcomes Framework make information central to the management of the UK National Health Service (NHS). The principles of patient choice and government policy on the transparency of outcomes for public services are key drivers for improving the performance. Specialist neonatal care is able to respond positively to these challenges owing to the development of a well-defined dataset and comprehensive national data collection. When combined with analysis, audit and feedback at the national level, this is proving to be an effective means to harness the potential of clinical data. Other key characteristics have been an integrated approach to ensure that data are captured once and serve multiple needs, collaboration between professional organisations, parents, academic institutions, the commercial sector and NHS managers, and responsiveness to changing requirements. The authors discuss these aspects of national neonatal specialist data and point to future developments.

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests Dr Spencer is the National Clinical Lead for Hospital Specialties at the NHS Information Centre. Professor Modi leads the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit, and is the Vice President (Science & Research) of the RCPCH, a member of the National Neonatal Audit Project Board and the BAPM Data Group, and Chair of the Thames Regional Outcomes Group.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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