NHS Digital Data Release Register - reformatted

NHS North Lincolnshire CCG projects

960 data files in total were disseminated unsafely (information about files used safely is missing for TRE/"system access" projects).


🚩 NHS North Lincolnshire CCG was sent multiple files from the same dataset, in the same month, both with optouts respected and with optouts ignored. NHS North Lincolnshire CCG may not have compared the two files, but the identifiers are consistent between datasets, and outside of a good TRE NHS Digital can not know what recipients actually do.

GDPPR COVID-19 – CCG - Pseudo — NIC-387297-J5L7M

Opt outs honoured: No - Statutory exemption to flow confidential data without consent (Excuses: Statutory exemption to flow confidential data without consent)

Legal basis: CV19: Regulation 3 (4) of the Health Service (Control of Patient Information) Regulations 2002, CV19: Regulation 3 (4) of the Health Service (Control of Patient Information) Regulations 2002; Health and Social Care Act 2012 - s261(5)(d)

Purposes: No (Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), Sub ICB Location)

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:DSA runs 2020-08 – 2021-03 2021.01 — 2021.05.

Access method: One-Off, Frequent Adhoc Flow

Data-controller type: NHS NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE CCG, NHS HUMBER AND NORTH YORKSHIRE ICB - 03K

Sublicensing allowed: No

AGD/predecessor discussions: igard-minutes-27-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---6-aug-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---20th-august-2020-final.pdf

Datasets:

  1. GPES Data for Pandemic Planning and Research (COVID-19)
  2. COVID-19 Vaccination Status
  3. COVID-19 General Practice Extraction Service (GPES) Data for Pandemic Planning and Research (GDPPR)

Type of data: Anonymised - ICO Code Compliant

Objectives:

NHS Digital has been provided with the necessary powers to support the Secretary of State’s response to COVID-19 under the COVID-19 Public Health Directions 2020 (COVID-19 Directions) and support various COVID-19 purposes, including those set out below, through:
• establishing and operating information systems to collect and analyse data in connection with COVID-19 for COVID-19 purposes, and
• developing and operating information and communication systems to deliver services in connection with COVID-19 for COVID-19 purposes,
Such COVID-19 purposes include the following:
a) Paragraph 2.2.2 of the COVID-19 Directions: identifying and understanding information about patients or potential patients with or at risk of COVID-19 , information about incidents of patient exposure to COVID-19 and the management of patients with or at risk of COVID-19 including: locating, contacting, screening, flagging and monitoring such patients and collecting information about and providing services in relation to testing, diagnosis, self-isolation, fitness to work, treatment, medical and social interventions and recovery from COVID-19
b) Paragraph 2.2.3 of the COVID-19 Directions: understanding information about patient access to health services and adult social care services as a direct or indirect result of COVID-19 and the availability and capacity of those services
c) Paragraph 2.2.4 of the COVID-19 Directions: monitoring and managing the response to COVID-19 by health and social care bodies and the Government including providing information to the public about COVID-19 and its effectiveness and information about capacity, medicines, equipment, supplies, services and the workforce within the health services and adult social care services

GPES data for pandemic planning and research (GDPPR COVID 19))
To support the response to the outbreak, NHS Digital has been legally directed to collect and analyse healthcare information about patients from their GP record for the duration of the COVID-19 emergency period under the above COVID-19 Directions.
The data which NHS Digital has collected and is providing under this agreement includes coded health data, which is held in a patients GP record such as details of:
• diagnoses and findings
• medications and other prescribed items
• investigations, tests and results
• treatments and outcomes
• vaccinations and immunisations

Details of any sensitive SNOMED codes can be found in the Reference Data and GDPPR COVID 19 user guides hosted on the NHS Digital website. SNOMED codes are included in GDPPR data.
There are no free text record entries in the data.

The Controller will use the pseudonymised GDPPR COVID 19 data to provide intelligence to support their local response to the COVID-19 emergency. The data is analysed so that health care provision can be planned to support the needs of the population within the CCG area for the COVID-19 purposes set out above.

Such uses cases of the data include but are not limited to:

• Analysis of missed appointments - Analysis of local missed/delayed referrals due to the COVID-19 crisis to estimate the potential impact to come and estimate of when ‘normal’ health and care services may resume, linked to Paragraph 2.2.3 of the COVID-19 Directions.

• Patient risk stratification and predictive modelling - to highlight patients at risk of requiring hospital admission due to COVID-19, computed using algorithms executed against linked de-identified data, and identification of future service delivery models linked to Paragraph 2.2.2 of the COVID-19 Directions. As with all risk stratification, this would lead to the reidentification of a cohort of patients specifically at risk.

• Resource Allocation - In order to assess system wide impact of COVID-19, the GDPPR COVID 19 data will allow reallocation of resources to the worst hit localities using their expertise in scenario planning, clinical impact and assessment of workforce needs, linked to Paragraph 2.2.4 of the COVID-19 Directions:

The data may be only be linked by the Recipient to other datasets which it holds under a current data sharing agreement (where such data is provided for the purposes of commissioning) with NHS Digital. Reidentification of individuals is not permitted under this DSA. The linked data may only be used for purposes stipulated within this agreement, and may only be held and used whilst both data sharing agreements are live and in date. Using the linked data for any other purposes, including non-COVID-19 purposes would be considered a breach of this agreement.

LEGAL BASIS FOR PROCESSING DATA:

Legal Basis for NHS Digital to Disseminate the Data:
NHS Digital is able to disseminate data with the Recipients for the agreed purposes under a notice issued to NHS Digital by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care under Regulation 3(4) of the Health Service Control of Patient Information Regulations (COPI) dated 17 March 2020 (the NHSD COPI Notice).
The Recipients are health organisations covered by Regulation 3(3) of COPI and the agreed purposes (paragraphs 2.2.2-2.2.4 of the COVID-19 Directions, as stated below in section 5a) for which the disseminated data is being shared are covered by Regulation 3(1) of COPI.

Under the Health and Social Care Act, NHS Digital is relying on section 261(5)(d) – necessary or expedient to share the disseminated data with the Recipients for the agreed purposes.


Legal Basis for Processing:
The Recipients are able to receive and process the disseminated data under a notice issued to the Recipients by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care under Regulation 3(4) of COPI dated 20th March (the Recipient COPI Notice section 2).

The Secretary of State has issued notices under the Health Service Control of Patient Information Regulations 2002 requiring the following organisations to process information:

Health organisations

“Health Organisations” defined below under Regulation 3(3) of COPI includes CCGs for the reasons explained below. These are clinically led statutory NHS bodies responsible for the planning and commissioning of health care services for their local area

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care has issued NHS Digital with a Notice under Regulation 3(4) of the National Health Service (Control of Patient Information Regulations) 2002 (COPI) to require NHS Digital to share confidential patient information with organisations permitted to process confidential information under Regulation 3(3) of COPI. These include:

• persons employed or engaged for the purposes of the health service

Under Section 26 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012, CCG’s have a duty to provide and manage health services for the population.

Under GDPR, the Recipients can rely on Article 6(1)(c) – Legal Obligation to receive and process the Disclosed Data from NHS Digital for the Agreed Purposes under the Recipient COPI Notice. As this is health information and therefore special category personal data the Recipients can also rely on Article 9(2)(h) – preventative or occupational medicine and para 6 of Schedule 1 DPA – statutory purpose.

Expected Benefits:

• Manage demand and capacity
• Reallocation of resources
• Bring in additional workforce support
• Assists commissioners to make better decisions to support patients
• Identifying COVID-19 trends and risks to public health
• Enables CCG’s to provide guidance and develop policies to respond to the outbreak
• Controlling and helping to prevent the spread of the virus

Outputs:

• Operational planning to predict likely demand on primary, community and acute service for vulnerable patients
• Analysis of resource allocation
• Investigating and monitoring the effects of COVID-19
• Patient Stratification, such as:
o Patients at highest risk of admission
o Frail and elderly
o Patients that are currently in hospital
o Patients with prescriptions related to COVID-19
o Patients recently Discharged from hospital

Processing:

PROCESSING CONDITIONS:
Data must only be used for the purposes stipulated within this Data Sharing Agreement. Any additional disclosure / publication will require further approval from NHS Digital.

Data Processors must only act upon specific instructions from the Data Controller.

All access to data is managed under Role-Based Access Controls. Users can only access data authorised by their role and the tasks that they are required to undertake.

Patient level data will not be linked other than as specifically detailed within this Data Sharing Agreement.

NHS Digital reminds all organisations party to this agreement of the need to comply with the Data Sharing Framework Contract requirements, including those regarding the use (and purposes of that use) by “Personnel” (as defined within the Data Sharing Framework Contract i.e.: employees, agents and contractors of the Data Recipient who may have access to that data).

The Recipients will keep their cut of the electronic disseminated data in an encrypted form and take all required security measures to protect the disseminated data and they will not generate copies of their cuts of the disseminated data unless this is strictly necessary. Where this is necessary, the Recipients will keep a log of all copies of the disseminated data and who is controlling them and ensure these are updated and destroyed securely.

Onward sharing is not permitted under this agreement.

The data disseminated will only be used for COVID-19 GDPPR purposes as described in this DSA, any other purpose is excluded.

SEGREGATION:
Where the Data Processor and/or the Data Controller hold both identifiable and pseudonymised data, the data will be held separately so data cannot be linked.

AUDIT
All access to data is auditable by NHS Digital in accordance with the Data Sharing Framework Contract and NHS Digital terms.
Under the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014, section 35, Secretary of State has power to audit all data that has flowed, including under COPI.


DATA MINIMISATION:
Data Minimisation in relation to the data sets listed within the application are listed below:

• Patients who are normally registered and/or resident within the CCG region (including historical activity where the patient was previously registered or resident in another commissioner).
and/or
• Patients treated by a provider where the CCG is the host/co-ordinating commissioner and/or has the primary responsibility for the provider services in the local health economy.
and/or
• Activity identified by the provider and recorded as such within national systems (such as SUS+) as for the attention of the CCG.

The Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) obtains the following data sets:
- GDPPR COVID 19 Data
Pseudonymisation is completed within the DSCRO and is then disseminated as follows:
1. Pseudonymised GDPPR COVID 19 data is securely transferred from the DSCRO to the Data Controller / Processor
2. Aggregation of required data will be completed by the Controller (or the Processor as instructed by the Controller).
3. Patient level data may not be shared by the Controller (or any of its processors).

DSfC - NHS North Lincolnshire CCG; RS, IV & Comm. — NIC-90680-M5B5W

Opt outs honoured: N, Y, No - data flow is not identifiable, Yes - patient objections upheld (Excuses: Section 251, Section 251 NHS Act 2006, Mixture of confidential data flow(s) with support under section 251 NHS Act 2006 and non-confidential data flow(s))

Legal basis: Health and Social Care Act 2012, Section 251 approval is in place for the flow of identifiable data, Health and Social Care Act 2012 – s261(1) and s261(2)(b)(ii), National Health Service Act 2006 - s251 - 'Control of patient information'. , Health and Social Care Act 2012 – s261(1) and s261(2)(b)(ii), Health and Social Care Act 2012 – s261(7); National Health Service Act 2006 - s251 - 'Control of patient information'., Health and Social Care Act 2012 – s261(2)(b)(ii)

Purposes: No (Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG), Sub ICB Location)

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:DSA runs 2019-03 – 2022-03 2017.06 — 2017.05.

Access method: Ongoing, Frequent adhoc flow, Frequent Adhoc Flow, One-Off

Data-controller type: NHS NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE CCG, NHS HUMBER AND NORTH YORKSHIRE ICB - 03K

Sublicensing allowed: No

AGD/predecessor discussions: igard-minutes-28th-february-2019---final.pdf, igarddraftminutes17thseptember2020final.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_30.03.17.pdf

Datasets:

  1. Local Provider Data - Acute
  2. Local Provider Data - Ambulance
  3. Local Provider Data - Community
  4. Local Provider Data - Demand for Service
  5. Local Provider Data - Diagnostic Services
  6. Local Provider Data - Emergency Care
  7. Local Provider Data - Experience Quality and Outcomes
  8. Local Provider Data - Mental Health
  9. Local Provider Data - Other not elsewhere classified
  10. Local Provider Data - Population Data
  11. Local Provider Data - Primary Care
  12. Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Data Set
  13. Mental Health Minimum Data Set
  14. Mental Health Services Data Set
  15. SUS Accident & Emergency data
  16. SUS Admitted Patient Care data
  17. SUS Outpatient data
  18. Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set
  19. Improving Access to Psychological Therapies Data Set
  20. Maternity Services Dataset
  21. SUS data (Accident & Emergency, Admitted Patient Care & Outpatient)
  22. SUS for Commissioners
  23. Public Health and Screening Services-Local Provider Flows
  24. Primary Care Services-Local Provider Flows
  25. Population Data-Local Provider Flows
  26. Other Not Elsewhere Classified (NEC)-Local Provider Flows
  27. Mental Health-Local Provider Flows
  28. Maternity Services Data Set
  29. Experience, Quality and Outcomes-Local Provider Flows
  30. Emergency Care-Local Provider Flows
  31. Diagnostic Services-Local Provider Flows
  32. Diagnostic Imaging Dataset
  33. Demand for Service-Local Provider Flows
  34. Community-Local Provider Flows
  35. Children and Young People Health
  36. Ambulance-Local Provider Flows
  37. Acute-Local Provider Flows
  38. Civil Registration - Births
  39. Civil Registration - Deaths
  40. Community Services Data Set
  41. National Cancer Waiting Times Monitoring DataSet (CWT)
  42. National Diabetes Audit
  43. Patient Reported Outcome Measures
  44. National Cancer Waiting Times Monitoring DataSet (NCWTMDS)
  45. Improving Access to Psychological Therapies Data Set_v1.5
  46. Civil Registrations of Death
  47. Community Services Data Set (CSDS)
  48. Diagnostic Imaging Data Set (DID)
  49. Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) v1.5
  50. Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Data Set (MHLDDS)
  51. Mental Health Minimum Data Set (MHMDS)
  52. Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS)
  53. Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs)

Type of data: Anonymised - ICO Code Compliant, Identifiable

Objectives:

Invoice Validation
As an approved Controlled Environment for Finance (CEfF), North of England CSU receives SUS data identifiable at the level of NHS number according to S.251 CAG 7-07(a) and (c)/2013, to undertake invoice validation on behalf of the CCG. NHS number is only used to confirm the accuracy of backing-data sets and will not be shared outside of the CEfF. The CCG are advised by the CSU whether payment for invoices can be made or not.

Risk Stratification
To use SUS data identifiable at the level of NHS number according to S.251 CAG 7-04(a)/2013 (and Primary Care Data) for the purpose of Risk Stratification. Risk Stratification provides a forecast of future demand by identifying high risk patients. This enables commissioners to initiate proactive management plans for patients that are potentially high service users. Risk Stratification enables GPs to better target intervention in Primary Care.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – SUS and Local Flows
To use pseudonymised data to provide intelligence to support commissioning of health services. The pseudonymised data is required to ensure that analysis of health care provision can be completed to support the needs of the health profile of the population within the CCG area based on the full analysis of multiple pseudonymised datasets.
The CCGs commission services from a range of providers covering a wide array of services. Each of the data flow categories requested supports the commissioned activity of one or more providers.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – Mental Health, Maternity, IAPT, CYPHS and DIDS
To use pseudonymised data for the following datasets to provide intelligence to support commissioning of health services :
- Mental Health Minimum Data Set (MHMDS)
- Mental Health Learning Disability Data Set (MHLDDS)
- Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS)
- Maternity Services Data Set (MSDS)
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT)
- Child and Young People Health Service (CYPHS)
- Diagnostic Imaging Data Set (DIDS)
The pseudonymised data is required to ensure that analysis of health care provision can be completed to support the needs of the health profile of the population within the CCG area based on the full analysis of multiple pseudonymised datasets.

Yielded Benefits:

Expected Benefits:

Invoice Validation
1. Financial validation of activity
2. CCG Budget control
3. Commissioning and performance management
4. Meeting commissioning objectives without compromising patient confidentiality
5. The avoidance of misappropriation of public funds to ensure the ongoing delivery of patient care

Risk Stratification
Risk stratification promotes improved case management in primary care and will lead to the following benefits being realised:
1. Improved planning by better understanding patient flows through the healthcare system, thus allowing commissioners to design appropriate pathways to improve patient flow and allowing commissioners to identify priorities and identify plans to address these.
2. Improved quality of services through reduced emergency readmissions, especially avoidable emergency admissions. This is achieved through mapping of frequent users of emergency services and early intervention of appropriate care.
3. Improved access to services by identifying which services may be in demand but have poor access, and from this identify areas where improvement is required.
4. Potentially reduced premature mortality by more targeted intervention in primary care, which supports the commissioner to meets its requirement to reduce premature mortality in line with the CCG Outcome Framework.
5. Better understanding of the health of and the variations in health outcomes within the population to help understand local population characteristics.
All of the above lead to improved patient experience through more effective commissioning of services.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – SUS and Local Flows
1. Supporting Quality Innovation Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) to review demand management, integrated care and pathways.
a. Analysis to support full business cases.
b. Develop business models.
c. Monitor In year projects.
2. Supporting Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) for specific disease types.
3. Health economic modelling using:
a. Analysis on provider performance against 18 weeks wait targets.
b. Learning from and predicting likely patient pathways for certain conditions, in order to influence early interventions and other treatments for patients.
c. Analysis of outcome measures for differential treatments, accounting for the full patient pathway.
d. Analysis to understand emergency care and linking A&E and Emergency Urgent Care Flows.
4. Commissioning cycle support for grouping and re-costing previous activity.
5. Enables monitoring of:
a. CCG outcome indicators.
b. Non-financial validation of activity.
c. Successful delivery of integrated care within the CCG.
d. Checking frequent or multiple attendances to improve early intervention and avoid admissions.
e. Case management.
f. Care service planning.
g. Commissioning and performance management.
h. List size verification by GP practices.
i. Understanding the care of patients in nursing homes.
j. Service Transformation Projects (STP)

6. Feedback to NHS service providers on data quality at an aggregate and individual record level – only on data initially provided by the service providers.



Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – Mental Health, Maternity, IAPT, CYPHS and DIDS
1. Supporting Quality Innovation Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) to review demand management, Integrated care and pathways.
a. Analysis to support full business cases.
b. Develop business models.
c. Monitor In year projects.
2. Supporting Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) for specific disease types.
3. Health economic modelling using:
a. Analysis on provider performance against targets.
b. Learning from and predicting likely patient pathways for certain conditions, in order to influence early interventions and other treatments for patients.
c. Analysis of outcome measures for differential treatments, accounting for the full patient pathway.
4. Commissioning cycle support for grouping and re-costing previous activity.
5. Enables monitoring of:
a. CCG outcome indicators.
b. Non-financial validation of activity.
c. Successful delivery of integrated care within the CCG.
d. Checking frequent or multiple attendances to improve early intervention and avoid admissions.
e. Case management.
f. Care service planning.
g. Commissioning and performance management.
h. List size verification by GP practices.
i. Understanding the care of patients in nursing homes.
6. Feedback to NHS service providers on data quality at an aggregate and individual record level – only on data initially provided by the service providers.

Outputs:

Invoice Validation
1. Addressing poor data quality issues
2. Production of reports for business intelligence
3. Budget reporting
4. Validation of invoices for non-contracted events

Risk Stratification
1. As part of the risk stratification processing activity detailed above, GPs have access to the risk stratification tool which highlights patients for whom the GP is responsible and have been classed as at risk. The only identifier available to GPs is the NHS numbers of their own patients. Any further identification of the patients will be completed by the GP on their own systems.
2. Output from the risk stratification tool will provide aggregate reporting of number and percentage of population found to be at risk.
3. Record level output will be available for commissioners (of the CCG), pseudonymised at patient level and aggregate with small number suppression.
4. GP Practices will be able to view the risk scores for individual patients with the ability to display the underlying SUS data for the individual patients when it is required for direct care purposes by someone who has a legitimate relationship with the patient.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – SUS and Local Flows
1. Commissioner reporting:
a. Summary by provider view - plan & actuals year to date (YTD).
b. Summary by Patient Outcome Data (POD) view - plan & actuals YTD.
c. Summary by provider view - activity & finance variance by POD.
d. Planned care by provider view - activity & finance plan & actuals POD.
e. Planned care by POD view – activity, finance plan & actuals YTD.
f. Provider reporting.
g. Statutory returns.
h. Statutory returns - monthly activity return.
i. Statutory returns - quarterly activity return.
j. Delayed discharges.
k. Quality & performance referral to treatment reporting.
2. Readmissions analysis.
3. Production of aggregate reports for CCG Business Intelligence.
4. Production of project / programme level dashboards.
5. Monitoring of acute / community / mental health quality matrix.
6. Clinical coding reviews / audits.
7. Budget reporting down to individual GP Practice level.
8. GP Practice level dashboard reports include frequent flyers.
9. Mortality
10. Quality
11. Service utilisation reporting
12. Patient safety indicators
13. Production of reports and dash boards to support service redesign and pathway changes

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – Mental Health, Maternity, IAPT, CYPHS and DIDS
1. Commissioner reporting:
a. Summary by provider view - plan & actuals year to date (YTD).
b. Summary by Patient Outcome Data (POD) view - plan & actuals YTD.
c. Summary by provider view - activity & finance variance by POD.
d. Planned care by provider view - activity & finance plan & actuals YTD.
e. Planned care by POD view - activity plan & actuals YTD.
f. Provider reporting.
g. Statutory returns.
h. Statutory returns - monthly activity return.
i. Statutory returns - quarterly activity return.
j. Delayed discharges.
k. Quality & performance referral to treatment reporting.
2. Readmissions analysis.
3. Production of aggregate reports for CCG Business Intelligence.
4. Production of project / programme level dashboards.
5. Monitoring of mental health quality matrix.
6. Clinical coding reviews / audits.
7. Budget reporting down to individual GP Practice level.
8. GP Practice level dashboard reports include frequent flyers.

Processing:

Invoice Validation
Data Processor 1- North of England CSU

SUS Data is obtained from the SUS Repository to DSCRO.
1. DSCRO pushes a one-way data flow of SUS data into the Controlled Environment for Finance (CEfF) in the North of England CSU.
2. The CSU carry out the following processing activities within the CEfF for invoice validation purposes:
a. Checking the individual is registered to a particular Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) and associated with an invoice from the SUS data flow to validate the corresponding record in the backing data flow
b. Once the backing information is received, this will be checked against national NHS and local commissioning policies as well as being checked against system access and reports provided by NHS Digital to confirm the payments are:
i. In line with Payment by Results tariffs
ii. are in relation to a patient registered with a CCG GP or resident within the CCG area.
iii. The health care provided should be paid by the CCG in line with CCG guidance. 
3. The CCG are notified that the invoice has been validated and can be paid. Any discrepancies or non-validated invoices are investigated and resolved between the CSU CEfF team and the provider meaning that no identifiable data needs to be sent to the CCG. The CCG only receives notification to pay and management reporting detailing the total quantum of invoices received pending, processed etc.

Risk Stratification
Data Processor 2- eMBED
1. Identifiable SUS data is obtained from the SUS Repository to the Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO).
2. Data quality management and standardisation of data is completed by the DSCRO and the data identifiable at the level of NHS number is transferred securely to eMBED, who hold the SUS data within eMBED secure storage.
3. Identifiable GP Data is securely sent from the GP system to eMBED.
4. SUS data is linked to GP data in the risk stratification tool by the data processor.
5. As part of the risk stratification processing activity, GPs have access to the risk stratification tool within the data processor, which highlights patients with whom the GP has a legitimate relationship and have been classed as at risk. The only identifier derived from SUS available to GPs is the NHS number of their own patients. Any further identification of the patients is derived from the GP data sourced from their own systems.
6. eMBED who hosts the risk stratification system that holds SUS data is limited to those administrative staff with authorised user accounts used for identification and authentication.
7. Once eMBED has completed the processing, the CCG can access the online system via a secure network connection to access the data pseudonymised at patient level.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – SUS and Local Flows
1. Yorkshire Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office / North England Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) obtains a flow of SUS identifiable data for the CCG from the SUS Repository. Yorkshire / North of England DSCRO also obtains identifiable local provider data for the CCG directly from Providers.
2. Data quality management and pseudonymisation of data is completed by the DSCRO and the pseudonymised data is then passed securely to North of England CSU for the addition of derived fields and analysis.
3. North of England CSU then pass the processed, pseudonymised data to both eMBED and the CCG.
4. eMBED receives the Pseudonymised data for the addition of derived fields, linkage of data sets and analysis. Linked data is limited to the following to give a rich and broad clinical journey allowing improved care planning, patient care and commissioning:

- SUS data and Local Provider data at pseudonymised level
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with SUS
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with SUS
- Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with SUS
- Maternity (MSDS) with SUS
- Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with Local provider data
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with Local provider data
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with Local provider data
- Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with Local provider data
- Maternity (MSDS) with Local provider data
- Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with Local provider data

5. eMBED securely transfer pseudonymised outputs for management use by the CCG.
6. The CCG receive Pseudonymised data from both North of England CSU and eMBED. The CCG then analyse the data to see patient journeys for pathways or service design, re-design and de-commissioning.
7. Aggregation of required data for CCG management use will be completed by the North of England CSU, eMBED or the CCG as instructed by the CCG.
8. Patient level data will not be shared outside of the CCG and will only be shared within the CCG on a need to know basis, as per the purposes stipulated within the Data Sharing Agreement. External aggregated reports only with small number suppression can be shared.
9. The CCG securely transfer data back to the provider to:
a) confirm how patients are reported in SUS, and how the commissioner can reliably group these patients into categories for points of delivery;
b) allow for granular data validation whereby a commissioner may query the SUS record, and need to pass it back to the provider for checking; and
c) to allow the provider to undertake further analysis of a cohort of their patients as requested and specified by the commissioner.

The data transferred to the provider is only that which relates directly to the data previously uploaded by that particular provider. No data sourced from another provider will be shared.

Commissioning (Pseudonymised) – Mental Health, MSDS, IAPT, CYPHS and DIDS
1. North of England Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) and Yorkshire Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) obtain a flow of data identifiable at the level of NHS number for Mental Health (MHSDS, MHMDS, and MHLDDS), Maternity (MSDS), Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT), Child and Young People’s Health (CYPHS) and Diagnostic Imaging (DIDS) for commissioning purposes.
2. Data quality management, minimisation and pseudonymisation of data is completed by North of England and DSCRO and the pseudonymised data is then passed securely to North of England CSU.
3. North of England CSU then securely transfer the processed, pseudonymised and linked data to eMBED.
4. eMBED receives the data from North of England CSU and carries out further data processing, addition of derived fields, linkage to other data sets and analysis. Linked data would include the following to give a rich and broad clinical journey allowing improved care planning, patient care and commissioning:
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with IAPT
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with SUS
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with SUS
- Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with SUS
- Maternity (MSDS) with SUS
- Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with SUS
5. Aggregation of required data for CCG management use is completed by eMBED or the CCG as instructed by the CCG.
6. Patient level data will not be shared outside of the CCG and will only be shared within the CCG on a need to know basis, as per the purposes stipulated within the Data Sharing Agreement. External aggregated reports only with small number suppression can be shared.

Project 3 — NIC-22446-F1V1W

Opt outs honoured: Y

Legal basis: Section 251 approval is in place for the flow of identifiable data

Purposes: ()

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:2016.12 — 2017.02.

Access method: Ongoing

Data-controller type:

Sublicensing allowed:

AGD/predecessor discussions: AGD minutes - 8th August 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 1 August 2024 final.pdf, AGD Minutes - 27 June 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 11th January 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 7th December 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 17 August 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 10 August 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 27 July 2023 - final.pdf, AGD minutes - 25 May 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 23 February 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 12 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15 December 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 1 December 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 November 2022 v1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27 October 2022 finalv2.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 13 October 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 6 October 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29 September 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 8 September 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25 August 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 4 August 2022.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 7th July 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 30 June 2022 final v1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 16 June 2022 - final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 May 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 May 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 28 April 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 31 March 2022 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 March 2022 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 March 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 March 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 March 2022 - Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 February 2022 Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 20 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 13 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 16 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 9 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 2 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 18 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 11 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 4 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 28 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 21 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 14 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 7 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 30 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 23 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 9 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 August 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 August 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes 12 August 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 5th August 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29 July 2021 - FINAL.pdf, IGARD Draft Minutes - 22 July 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15 July 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 1 July 2021 Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24th June 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17th June 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 20th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes-13th May 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 6th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29th April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 22nd April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15th April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25th March 2021 final.pdf, igard-minutes---3rd-september-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-27-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---20th-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---13th-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---6-aug-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---30th-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---23-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes--16-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---9-july-2020-final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 2 July 2020 final.pdf, igard-minutes---25th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---18th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-11th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---28th-may-2020-final.pdf.pdf, igard-minutes---21st-may-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---7th-may-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---30th-april-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---23rd-april-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-13th-december-2018-final.pdf, igard-minutes-1-november-2018---final.pdf, igard-minutes-4th-october-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-05-july-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-24-may-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-17-may-2018.pdf, igard_minutes_15_march_2018.pdf, igard_minutes_14_december_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_7_december_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_9_november_20171.pdf, igard_minutes_28_september_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_21_september_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_14_september_2017.pdf, igardminutes24thseptember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-8thoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-5thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-4thfebruary2021final_.pdf, igardminutes-3rddecember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-29thoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-28thjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-26thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-25thfebruary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-22ndoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-21stjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-1stoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-17thdecember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-14thjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-12thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-11thfebruary2021final.pdf, igarddraftminutes17thseptember2020final.pdf, igarddraftminutes10thdecember2020final.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_24.08.17.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_20.07.17.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_11.05.17.pdf, IGARDMinutes-4thMarch2021final.pdf, IGARDMinutes-18thMarch2021final.pdf, IGARDMinutes-11thMarch2021final.pdf

Datasets:

  1. SUS (Accident & Emergency, Inpatient and Outpatient data)

Type of data:

Objectives:

To utilise SUS data Identifiable at the level of NHS number to provide risk stratification information to the CCG and GP practices.

Expected Benefits:

Risk Stratification promotes improved case management in primary care which is expected to lead to the following benefits being realised :
1. Improved planning by better understanding the patient flows through the healthcare system, thus allowing commissioners to design appropriate pathways to improve patient flow and identify plans to address these.

2. Improved quality of services through reduced emergency readmissions, especially avoidable emergency admissions. This is achieved via the mapping of frequent users of emergency services and the early intervention of appropriate care.

3. Improved access to services by identifying which services may be in demand but have poor access and from this identify areas where improvement is required.

4. Potentially reduce premature mortality by more targeted intervention in primary care, which supports the commissioner to meet its requirement to reduce premature mortality in line with the CCG Outcome Framework.

Outputs:

To provide risk profiling, calculated on activity data from secondary and primary care. As part of the risk stratification processing activity detailed above, the GP have access to the eMBED Dr Foster tool for reports which presents to them their registered patients and associated risk score.
The only identifier to be provided to the GP is the NHS number of their registered patient.
The GP can access the eMBED Dr Foster tool which is a secure portal at any time which will support MDT discussions around ongoing patient care.
The GP would be able to copy and paste the NHS number presented on screen to any other program and then save it, in order to maintain a risk register of their patients and perform the key aspects of this risk stratification role.
CCG staff who have been granted access to the secure portal can only access aggregated output / reports. eMBED staff who have been granted access to the secure portal can only access aggregated suppressed data at GP practice level.

Processing:

Processing of SUS Data for the purposes of Risk Stratification includes landing, processing, staging and publication.
DSCRO North England – part of HSCIC - receive a flow of identifiable SUS data for the CCG from the SUS Repository.
1. Landing
Prior to the release of SUS data by DSCRO Yorkshire, Type 2 objections will be applied and the relevant patients data redacted. DSCRO North of England securely transfer the SUS data identifiable at the level of NHS number to Dr Foster Ltd. Data is landed and processed in an access restricted server located at Dr Foster’s Head Office (Dorset Rise, London).
The SUS dataset for Risk Stratification purposes is recorded on the Dr Foster Ltd Data Asset Register (DAR) and allocated a unique Asset Tag and classification; in addition a Date of Destruction is recorded along with other contractual requirements relating to the publication of these data.
Once the data has been secured within the database the original SUS PCD data file is securely destroyed using CESG approved shredding software which produces a certificate of destruction. The certificate is referenced on the Data Asset Register.
Only named individuals have access to process the data. All users undertake regular IG training, in line with IGT & ISO 27001:2013 requirements.
2. Processing (ETL)
Data is processed on a monthly basis, which follows Dr Foster’s audited ETL process.
2.1. Cleaning and quality checks are undertaken.
2.2. Creation of Risk Stratification dataset.
2.3. Risk Stratification dataset processed through Dr Foster’s Risk Stratification Algorithm to produce a Risk Stratified dataset
3. Staging
Data is landed to a secure staging area for final quality checks using the Dr Foster Analysis Toolkit in an offline Q/A environment. A named QA analyst undertakes the quality checks.
4. Publication
Outputs are available to eMBED, the CCG and the GP practices via the eMBED Dr Foster Toolkit. Access to the toolkit is via role-based access. All usage of its tools is audited.
Record level data, identifiable at the level of NHS number, is only available to named individuals within the GP Practices for their own patients only who have a legitimate relationship with the CCG or where an individual working within a GP Practice has the authorisation of their Caldicott Guardian to access patient level information, including sensitive items, for the purposes of conducting Risk Stratification for case finding. (The GP user is prompted to re-enter their eMBED Dr Foster Tool password in order to view patient NHS Numbers.)
The GP will not have direct access to any underlying patient level SUS data. The only data that is visible via the eMBED Dr Foster Tool that is directly taken from SUS is the patient NHS number, date of last admission, and number of admissions in the last year. An audit trail of the data accessed is reported on a monthly basis to GP practices and the GPs’ Caldicott Guardian.)
The CCG has an aggregated data view only of Risk Stratification for commissioning purposes based on their related GP practices.
eMBED CSU can access the eMBED Dr Foster Tool but only have access to aggregated suppressed data at GP practice level. eMBED Business Intelligence (BI) staff will be active in providing added value, additional support and further analysis to CCG customers where required and therefore require an aggregated output of the data.
No record-level SUS is provided to any other organisation.

Project 4 — NIC-21860-S1S4J

Opt outs honoured: N

Legal basis: Health and Social Care Act 2012

Purposes: ()

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:2016.12 — 2017.02.

Access method: Ongoing

Data-controller type:

Sublicensing allowed:

AGD/predecessor discussions: AGD minutes - 8th August 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 1 August 2024 final.pdf, AGD Minutes - 27 June 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 14 March 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 18 January 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 11th January 2024 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 7th December 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 17 August 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 10 August 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 27 July 2023 - final.pdf, AGD minutes - 25 May 2023 final.pdf, AGD minutes - 23 February 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 12 January 2023 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15 December 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 1 December 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 November 2022 v1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 November 2022 finalv1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27 October 2022 finalv2.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 13 October 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 6 October 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29 September 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 22 September 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 8 September 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25 August 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 4 August 2022.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 7th July 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 30 June 2022 final v1.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 16 June 2022 - final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 May 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 May 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 28 April 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 31 March 2022 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 March 2022 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 March 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 March 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 March 2022 - Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17 February 2022 Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 10 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3 February 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 20 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 13 January 2022 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 16 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 9 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 2 December 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 18 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 11 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 4 November 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 28 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 21 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 14 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 7 October 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 30 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 23 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 9 September 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 26 August 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 19 August 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes 12 August 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 5th August 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29 July 2021 - FINAL.pdf, IGARD Draft Minutes - 22 July 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15 July 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 1 July 2021 Final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 24th June 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 17th June 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 3rd June 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 27th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 20th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes-13th May 2021 FINAL.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 6th May 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 29th April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 22nd April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 15th April 2021 final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 25th March 2021 final.pdf, igard-minutes---3rd-september-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-27-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---20th-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---13th-august-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---6-aug-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---30th-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---23-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes--16-july-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---9-july-2020-final.pdf, IGARD Minutes - 2 July 2020 final.pdf, igard-minutes---25th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---18th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-11th-june-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---28th-may-2020-final.pdf.pdf, igard-minutes---21st-may-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---7th-may-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---30th-april-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes---23rd-april-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-9th-april-2020-final.pdf, igard-minutes-17th-january-2019---final.pdf, igard-minutes-13th-december-2018-final.pdf, igard-minutes-8th-november-2018---final.pdf, igard-minutes-1-november-2018---final.pdf, igard-minutes-4th-october-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-05-july-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-24-may-2018.pdf, igard-minutes-17-may-2018.pdf, igard_minutes_15_march_2018.pdf, igard_minutes_14_december_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_7_december_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_9_november_20171.pdf, igard_minutes_28_september_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_21_september_2017.pdf, igard_minutes_14_september_2017.pdf, igardminutes24thseptember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-8thoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-5thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-4thfebruary2021final_.pdf, igardminutes-3rddecember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-29thoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-28thjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-26thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-25thfebruary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-22ndoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-21stjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-1stoctober2020final.pdf, igardminutes-18thfebruary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-17thdecember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-14thjanuary2021final.pdf, igardminutes-12thnovember2020final.pdf, igardminutes-11thfebruary2021final.pdf, igarddraftminutes17thseptember2020final.pdf, igarddraftminutes10thdecember2020final.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_24.08.17.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_20.07.17.pdf, IGARD_Minutes_11.05.17.pdf, IGARDMinutes-4thMarch2021final.pdf, IGARDMinutes-18thMarch2021final.pdf, IGARDMinutes-11thMarch2021final.pdf

Datasets:

  1. Mental Health Minimum Data Set
  2. Mental Health and Learning Disabilities Data Set
  3. Mental Health Services Data Set
  4. Improving Access to Psychological Therapies Data Set
  5. Children and Young People's Health Services Data Set

Type of data:

Objectives:

To use pseudonymised data for the following datasets to provide intelligence to support commissioning of health services:
• Mental Health Minimum Data Set (MHMDS)
• Mental Health Learning Disability Data Set (MHLDDS)
• Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS)
• Improving Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT)
• Children and Young People’s Health (CYPHS)

The pseudonymised data is required to ensure that analysis of health care provision can be completed to support the needs of the health profile of the population within the CCG area based on the full analysis of multiple pseudonymised datasets.

Expected Benefits:

1. Supporting Quality Innovation Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) to review demand management, Integrated Care and pathways.
a. Analysis to support full business cases.
b. Development of business models.
c. Monitoring In year projects.
2. Supporting Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) for specific disease types.
3. Health economic modelling using:
a. Analysis on provider performance against 18 weeks wait targets.
b. Learning from and predicting likely patient pathways for certain conditions, in order to influence early interventions and other treatments for patients.
c. Analysis of outcome measures for differential treatments, accounting for the full patient pathway.
d. Analysis to understand emergency care and linking A&E and Emergency Urgent Care Flows (EUCC).
4. Commissioning cycle support for grouping and re-costing previous activity.
5. Enables monitoring of:
a. CCG outcome indicators.
b. Non-financial validation of activity.
c. Successful delivery of integrated care within the CCG.
d. Checking frequent or multiple attendances to improve early intervention and avoid admissions.
e. Case management.
f. Care service planning.
g. Commissioning and performance management.
h. List size verification by GP practices.

Outputs:

As a result of the aforementioned processing activities, eMBED will provide a number of outputs which are securely provided to the CCGs in the appropriate format at pseudonymised level.
Where datasets have been linked, the CCG will receive the outputs of analysis instead of the direct data, however it may also be necessary to provide linked data at row level to CCGs (pseudonymised record level data).
eMBED will provide aggregated reports only with small number suppression to CCG’s stakeholders e.g. GP practices, Local Authorities. Where such data is provided there are safeguards in place to ensure that the receiving organisation has recognised the required safety controls required, i.e. signed agreements from the receiving organisation regarding compliance with data protection and the agreed use of the data.
eMBED will flow outputs, mostly in the form of reports to the CCG stakeholders. CCGs may also provide their stakeholders with the anonymised outputs. The anonymisation will be achieved by aggregating records and using small number suppression in line with HES analysis guidance.
eMBED provides a range of Business Intelligence functions and outputs as specified by the CCG. These outputs can be presented in a variety of different ways to a variety of different users, from highly aggregated graphical “dashboards” to very low-level tabular analysis, and everything in between with the opportunity to drill-down into the detail. Provision of aggregated reports only with small number suppression data to CCG stakeholders allows for analysis at an appropriate level, revealing potentially useful but previously unrecognised commissioning insights/trends whilst mitigating against the risk of re-identification of individuals
1. Commissioner reporting:
a. Summary by provider view - plan & actuals year to date (YTD).
b. Summary by Patient Outcome Data (POD) view - plan & actuals YTD.
c. Summary by provider view - activity & finance variance by POD.
d. Planned care by provider view - activity & finance plan & actuals YTD.
e. Planned care by POD view - activity plan & actuals YTD.
f. Provider reporting.
g. Statutory returns.
h. Statutory returns - monthly activity return.
i. Statutory returns - quarterly activity return.
j. Delayed discharges.
k. Quality & performance referral to treatment reporting.
2. Readmissions analysis.
3. Production of aggregate reports for CCG Business Intelligence.
4. Production of project / programme level dashboards.
5. Monitoring of mental health quality matrix.
6. Clinical coding reviews / audits.
7. Budget reporting down to individual GP Practice level.
8. GP Practice level dashboard reports including high flyers.
The PCU produces a number of reports which provide a summary (not patient level data) which are shared back to the CCG, the following are a list of these:
IAPT Dataset

Mandated national contract KPIs:
Completion of IAPT Minimum Data Set outcome data
IAPT Access Times – 6 & 18 wk (finished treatment)

Local CCG and NHSE information and KPIs:
Number of Referrals
Number Entering Treatment
Monthly Prevalence rate
Number completing treatment
Number moving to recovery
Number not at caseness
Monthly Recovery rate
Reliable Improvement rate
IAPT Access Times – 6 & 18 wk (entering treatment)
Waiting times for treatment and those still waiting
Clearance times


Local CCG monitoring:
Appointments, cancellations and DNA rate analysis
Data Quality
Referral rates and activity by GP Practice and Age band

Mental Health Dataset

Mandated national contract KPIs :
Completion of valid NHS number field
Completion of Ethnic coding
Under 16 bed days on Adult wards (Never event)

Local CCG and NHSE information and KPIs:
Gatekeeping admissions
7 day follow-up hospital discharges
EIP access rates
Eating disorders

Local CCG monitoring:
Referral rates by GP Practice and Age band
CPA monitoring inc settled accommodation and employment
CPA reviews within 12 months, step up/down etc
Bed days, admissions and discharges
Delayed discharges
Detentions
LD/ MH/CAMHS ward stays
Bed locality (distance out of area)
Contacts and DNA rates
Cluster monitoring and red rules
Data quality

The PCU will also share aggregated reports only with small number suppression back to the provider.
The PCU shares aggregated reports only with small number suppression outputs with NHS England for national reporting and to support any issues that need rising in relation to data quality.

Processing:

1. North of England Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) and Yorkshire Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) obtain a flow of data identifiable at the level of NHS number for Mental Health (MHSDS, MHMDS, and MHLDDS), Maternity (MSDS), Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT), Child and Young People’s Health (CYPHS) and Diagnostic Imaging (DIDS) for commissioning purposes.
2. Data quality management, minimisation and pseudonymisation of data is completed by North of England and Yorkshire DSCRO and the pseudonymised data is then passed securely to North of England CSU.
3. North of England CSU then securely transfer the processed, pseudonymised and linked data to eMBED.
4. eMBED receives the data from North of England CSU and carries out further data processing, addition of derived fields, linkage to other data sets and analysis. Linked data would include the following to give a rich and broad clinical journey allowing improved care planning, patient care and commissioning:
• Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with IAPT
• Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with SUS
• Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with SUS
• Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with SUS
• Maternity (MSDS) with SUS
• Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with SUS
5. Aggregation of required data for CCG management use is completed by eMBED or the CCG as instructed by the CCG.
6. Patient level data will not be shared outside of the CCG and will only be shared within the CCG on a need to know basis, as per the purposes stipulated within the Data Sharing Agreement. External aggregated reports only with small number suppression in line with the HES analysis guide can be shared.

Project 5 — NIC-56454-Y9L0V

Opt outs honoured: Y

Legal basis: Section 251 approval is in place for the flow of identifiable data

Purposes: ()

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:2016.12 — 2017.02.

Access method: Ongoing

Data-controller type:

Sublicensing allowed:

AGD/predecessor discussions: IGARD Minutes - 26 January 2023 final.pdf

Datasets:

  1. SUS (Accident & Emergency, Inpatient and Outpatient data)

Type of data:

Objectives:

As an approved Controlled Environment for Finance (CEfF), the data processor receives SUS data identifiable at the level of NHS number according to S.251 CAG 7-07(a) and (c)/2013, to undertake invoice validation on behalf of the CCG. NHS number is only used to confirm the accuracy of backing-data sets and will not be shared outside of the CEfF. The CCG are advised by the CSU whether payment for invoices can be made or not.

No record level data will be linked other than as specifically detailed within this application/agreement. Data will only be shared with those parties listed and will only be used for the purposes laid out in the application/agreement. The data to be released from the NHS Digital will not be national data, but only that data relating to the specific locality of interest of the applicant.

Expected Benefits:

1. Financial validation of activity
2. CCG Budget control
3. Commissioning and performance management
4. Meeting commissioning objectives without compromising patient confidentiality
5. The avoidance of misappropriation of public funds to ensure the ongoing delivery of patient care

Outputs:

1. Addressing poor data quality issues
2. Production of reports for business intelligence
3. Budget reporting
4. Validation of invoices for non-contracted events

Processing:

North of England DSCRO (part of NHS Digital) will apply Type 2 objections (from 14th October 2016 onwards) before any identifiable data leaves the DSCRO.
1. SUS Data is obtained from the SUS Repository to North of England DSCRO.
2. North of England DSCRO pushes a one-way data flow of SUS data into the Controlled Environment for Finance (CEfF) in the North of England CSU.
3. The CSU carry out the following processing activities within the CEfF for invoice validation purposes:
a. Checking the individual is registered to a particular Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) and associated with an invoice from the national SUS data flow to validate the corresponding record in the backing data flow
b. Once the backing information is received, this will be checked against national NHS and local commissioning policies as well as being checked against system access and reports provided by NHS Digital to confirm the payments are:
i. In line with Payment by Results tariffs
ii. are in relation to a patient registered with a CCG GP or resident within the CCG area.
iii. The health care provided should be paid by the CCG in line with CCG guidance. 
4. The CCG are notified that the invoice has been validated and can be paid. Any discrepancies or non-validated invoices are investigated and resolved between the CSU CEfF team and the provider meaning that no identifiable data needs to be sent to the CCG. The CCG only receives notification to pay and management reporting detailing the total quantum of invoices received pending, processed etc.

Project 6 — NIC-60440-H1C5S

Opt outs honoured: N

Legal basis: Health and Social Care Act 2012

Purposes: ()

Sensitive: Sensitive

When:2016.12 — 2017.02.

Access method: Ongoing

Data-controller type:

Sublicensing allowed:

AGD/predecessor discussions: IGARD Minutes - 26 January 2023 final.pdf

Datasets:

  1. SUS (Accident & Emergency, Inpatient and Outpatient data)
  2. Local Provider Data - Acute, Ambulance, Community, Demand for Service, Diagnostic Services, Emergency Care, Experience Quality and Outcomes, Mental Health, Other not elsewhere classified, Population Data, Primary Care

Type of data:

Objectives:

SUS and Local Provider Data - The CCG recognises that good information and intelligence is crucial for the commissioning of high quality and safe services leading to better outcomes for the populations they serve. This application supports this objective.
This arrangement was previously agreed to facilitate the transfer of Commissioning Support Services, from Yorkshire & Humber Commissioning Support Unit (Y&H CSU), who previously held ASH status and served the CCGs, to North England CSU (NECS), and eMBED Health Consortium, for ongoing provision in line with the NHS England Lead Provider Framework (LPF).

Data Processor 1 - NECS is a commissioning support unit that had been working with the CCG for some time.
Data Processor 2 - eMBED was appointed in March 2016 to continue the operations of the Yorkshire and Humber CSU; Kier Business Services Limited, with additional Business Intelligence work carried out under contract by Dr Foster Ltd.
Kier Business Services are the prime partner for the LPF within the eMBED Health Consortium. Both organisations (Kier Business Services and Dr Foster Ltd) are a legal entity in their own right. Dr Foster Ltd are subcontracted to Kier Business Services for the delivery of eMBED Health Consortium services.

Expected Benefits:

1. Supporting Quality Innovation Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) to review demand management, integrated care and pathways.
a. Analysis to support full business cases.
b. Develop business models.
c. Monitor In year projects.
2. Supporting Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) for specific disease types.
3. Health economic modelling using:
a. Analysis on provider performance against 18 weeks wait targets.
b. Learning from and predicting likely patient pathways for certain conditions, in order to influence early interventions and other treatments for patients.
c. Analysis of outcome measures for differential treatments, accounting for the full patient pathway.
d. Analysis to understand emergency care and linking A&E and Emergency Urgent Care Flows (EUCC).
4. Commissioning cycle support for grouping and re-costing previous activity.
5. Enables monitoring of:
a. CCG outcome indicators.
b. Non-financial validation of activity.
c. Successful delivery of integrated care within the CCG.
d. Checking frequent or multiple attendances to improve early intervention and avoid admissions.
e. Case management.
f. Care service planning.
g. Commissioning and performance management.
h. List size verification by GP practices.
i. Understanding the care of patients in nursing homes.
6. Feedback to NHS service providers on data quality at an aggregate and individual record level – only on data initially provided by the service providers.

Outputs:

1. Commissioner reporting:
a. Summary by provider view - plan & actuals year to date (YTD).
b. Summary by Patient Outcome Data (POD) view - plan & actuals YTD.
c. Summary by provider view - activity & finance variance by POD.
d. Planned care by provider view - activity & finance plan & actuals YTD.
e. Planned care by POD view - activity plan & actuals YTD.
f. Provider reporting.
g. Statutory returns.
h. Statutory returns - monthly activity return.
i. Statutory returns - quarterly activity return.
j. Delayed discharges.
k. Quality & performance referral to treatment reporting.
2. Readmissions analysis.
3. Production of aggregate reports for CCG Business Intelligence.
4. Production of project / programme level dashboards.
5. Monitoring of acute / community / mental health quality matrix.
6. Clinical coding reviews / audits.
7. Budget reporting down to individual GP Practice level.
8. GP Practice level dashboard reports include high flyers.
9. Monitoring of hospital activity against planned levels where an established contract exists between a provider and a commissioner inclusive of:
o Overall contract reporting of actual vs plan for activity and value at aggregate level
o Reconciliation reports between local hospital data, and SUS records at aggregate level.
o Contract Data Quality reporting at anonymised in context record level.
10. QIPP scheme analysis at aggregate level
11. Monitoring of SUS based CCG Outcome Framework indicators at aggregate level with small number suppression.
12. “Deep dive” analysis of hospital activity at aggregate level.
13. Cross CCG benchmarking at aggregate level.
14. Provision of aggregate reports with small number suppression activity data to CCGs’ stakeholders e.g. Health and Wellbeing Boards where the CCG have agreed to this

Processing:

1. Yorkshire Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office / North England Data Services for Commissioners Regional Office (DSCRO) obtains a flow of SUS identifiable data for the CCG from the SUS Repository. Yorkshire / North England DSCRO also obtains identifiable local provider data for the CCG directly from Providers.
2. Data quality management and pseudonymisation of data is completed by the DSCRO and the pseudonymised data is then passed securely to North of England CSU for the addition of derived fields and analysis.
3. North of England CSU then pass the processed, pseudonymised data to both eMBED and the CCG.
4. eMBED receives the Pseudonymised data for the addition of derived fields, linkage of data sets and analysis. Linked data is limited to the following to give a rich and broad clinical journey allowing improved care planning, patient care and commissioning:

- SUS data and Local Provider data at pseudonymised level
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with SUS
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with SUS
- Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with SUS
- Maternity (MSDS) with SUS
- Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with Local provider data
- Mental Health (MHSDS, MHLDDS, MHMDS) with Local provider data
- Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) with Local provider data
- Diagnostic Imaging Dataset (DIDs) with Local provider data
- Maternity (MSDS) with Local provider data
- Children and Young People’s Health Services (CYPHS) with Local provider data

5. eMBED securely transfer pseudonymised outputs for management use by the CCG.
6. The CCG receive Pseudonymised data from both North of England CSU and eMBED. The CCG then analyse the data to see patient journeys for pathways or service design, re-design and de-commissioning.
7. Aggregation of required data for CCG management use will be completed by the CSU, eMBED or the CCG as instructed by the CCG.
8. Patient level data will not be shared outside of the CCG and will only be shared within the CCG on a need to know basis, as per the purposes stipulated within the Data Sharing Agreement. External aggregated reports only with small number suppression in line with the HES analysis guide can be shared where contractual arrangements are in place.
9. The CCG securely transfer Pseudonymised data back to the provider to:
a) confirm how patients are reported in SUS, and how the commissioner can reliably group these patients into categories for points of delivery;
b) allow for granular data validation whereby a commissioner may query the SUS record, and need to pass it back to the provider for checking; and
c) to allow the provider to undertake further analysis of a cohort of their patients as requested and specified by the commissioner.
The data transferred to the provider is only that which relates directly to the data previously uploaded by that particular provider.