NHS England is currently testing different models of the single patient record, ahead of implementation, it has said.
A planned single patient record (SPR) which will make patients’ data visible to clinicians across different care settings is in a ‘test and learn’ phase, according to the commissioner.
Plans for the SPR were trailed by health secretary Wes Streeting last October and formally announced this year as part of the NHS 10-year health plan, which confirmed the SPR would be available to patients via the NHS App by 2028.
Now NHS England has confirmed that the test phase will run through the autumn and culminate in a ‘programme business case’ and that the SPR would ‘provide a single version of the truth across care settings’.
It said: ‘For the first time ever, patients will be given real control over a single, secure and authoritative account of their data and a single patient record to enable more co-ordinated, personalised and predictive care.
‘It will unify patient information from across the NHS, giving both patients and professionals secure access to a single, accurate and up-to-date record – wherever and whenever it’s needed.
‘It will end many of the frustrations patients shared during our public engagement. No more repeated stories. No more appointments where clinicians are unaware of what happened previously.’
It said the testing phase would explore three options for how the SPR would be built:
- Shared Care Record – Hub and Spoke: integrates existing regional Shared Care Records, linked via a central API (a ‘secure way’ for different systems to connect and share information);
- Central Integration Model: a centrally managed data store for real-time access;
- Virtual Data Layer: connects existing systems to provide a joined-up view at the point of accessing data.
This phase of the SPR’s development would include ‘working with a small number of suppliers’ to test the three models.
In an NHS England meeting last month, Ming Tang, its chief data and analytics officer and interim chief digital and information officer, said a resultant SPR ‘prototype’ would likely be ‘ready for review by the end of the year’.
NHS England did not confirm the names of the suppliers, but the announcement said ‘their involvement now will neither give them an advantage nor exclude them from future opportunities’.
However, it did say the ‘SPR will, wherever possible, build on and connect with existing systems’ including the NHS Federated Data Platform (FDP) – intended to link together data from across NHS organisations to support both planning and direct care.
Palantir – a data analytics company known for its work with US intelligence and security agencies – was awarded a £330m, seven-year contract in 2023 to deliver the FDP.
NHS England also clarified in its announcement the Government would need to pass ‘new legislation that places a duty on every health and care provider to make the information they record about a patient accessible to that patient’.
Community pharmacies will also be linked to the SPR, as the Government said it will increase their role in the management of long-term conditions.
Subject to parliamentary time, from 2028 patients will be able to view it on the NHS App and over time it will also include a ‘personalised account’ of health risk, drawing from lifestyle, demographic and genomic data.
A version of this story was first published on our sister title Pulse.

