Source - Alliance News

NHS England has warned of ‘delays’ as services recover from Friday’s global IT outage.

Nonetheless, the health service said patients ‘should continue to attend [appointments] unless told not to’.

It comes after the British Medical Association (BMA) warned on Sunday that normal GP service ‘cannot be resumed immediately’ after the outage caused a ‘considerable backlog’.

The trade union for doctors said GPs would ‘need time to catch up from lost work over the weekend’, adding that NHS England should ‘make clear to patients’ this was the case.

The BMA said its GP committee would continue to talk to NHS England and patient record system supplier EMIS to secure a ‘better system of IT back-up’ to ensure the ‘disaster’ was not repeated.

A flawed update rolled out by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike knocked many services offline around the world on Friday, causing flight and train cancellations and crippling some healthcare systems.

A fix was deployed for a bug in the update, which affected equipment running the Microsoft Windows operating system, as CrowdStrike’s Chief Executive George Kurtz said it would take ‘some time’ for systems to be fully restored.

Across England, GP surgeries reported being unable to book appointments or access patient records on Friday as their EMIS system went down.

An NHS spokesperson said: ‘Systems are now back online, and patients with an NHS appointment this week should continue to attend unless told not to.

‘Thanks to the hard work of NHS staff throughout this incident we are hoping to keep further disruption to a minimum, however there still may be some delays as services recover, particularly with GPs needing to rebook appointments, so please bear with us.

‘It’s important that patients attend appointments as normal unless told otherwise. You can contact your GP in the usual way, or use your local pharmacy, NHS 111 online or call 111 for urgent health advice.’

David Wrigley, deputy chairman of GPC England, the representative body for GPs at the BMA, said: ‘Friday was one of the toughest single days in recent times for GPs across England. Without a clinical IT system many were forced to return to pen and paper to be able to serve their patients...The temporary loss of the EMIS patient record system has meant a considerable backlog.

‘Even if we could guarantee it could be fully fixed on Monday, GPs would still need time to catch up from lost work over the weekend, and NHSE (National Health Service England) should make clear to patients that normal service cannot be resumed immediately.

Wrigley added: ’The BMA’s GP committee will continue our dialogue with both EMIS and NHSE, both to make sure that the coming week can be used to recover as quickly as possible and to urgently work on securing a better system of IT back-up so that this disaster is not repeated in future.‘

By Sam Hall

source: PA

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