Consumer guidance
Guidance if you are responsible for commissioning or procuring digital services, provided by others, that your organisation uses. This guidance will give you a high level overview of the steps you should take to bring your organisation into line with Internet First policy.
You will need to work with your suppliers and providers to:
- remediate services your organisation uses, so that they can be made available over the public internet
- ensure any new services are designed to be available over the public internet
The responsibility for services meeting mandatory standards rests with you, the consumer, as well as the supplier you use, so it is important you understand these standards when commissioning new services or remediation of existing services.
You need to:
- Audit the current situation – create an asset register of existing digital services, and how they are currently hosted and made available (or review your existing register)
- Include any digital services which are not yet in use but are being procured or planned.
- Work with your suppliers and create an implementation plan to remediate existing digital services so that they are available over the public internet, and ensure that any planned digital services will be designed to meet the Internet First policy.
1. Audit your existing digital services
It is important to fully understand and document your estate. This will give you an up to date picture of the Digital Services consumed and hosted by your organisation, and what will need to change to meet the Internet First policy. You will then be in a strong position to move forward.
Benefits include:
- building an understanding of the scale of change required for your organisation so that you can plan effectively for delivery and implementation
- the information will help you to complete future required submissions, for example to the Data Security and Protection Toolkit.
Create an asset register
You will probably already have an asset register you can build on to use for your Internet First implementation plan – for example your Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery (BCDR) register or service management register.
Include services provided by:
Firewall rules and network analysis tools can help you identify Digital Services that your organisation uses (consumes).
Detail how these services are made available
Understanding how Digital Services are currently made available (for example, how they are hosted, the network they run across and dependencies on other Digital Services) will help you identify what will need to change as services move to being made available over the public internet.
NHS Digital services
Many health and care services rely on integration with the systems and services that we provide.
The NHS Digital services that enable and support health and care include:
- SPINE – by building the Spine Internet Gateway (along with the national API Management portal)
- The Electronic Referral Service
- The Care Identity Service (NHS Smartcard) by building NHS Identity
- The NHS Data Landing Portal
- NHSMail2
- The Electronic Prescription Service
- The Summary Care Record Service
- The Secondary Users Service2
We are working to make all NHS Digital services available over the public internet by March 2021.
Find out which NHS Digital services are already available over the public internet.
Other suppliers or providers, or Digital Services you provide
The Digital Services you currently use may not be suitable for use over the internet.
In the past, the use of national applications (for example Spine based Digital Services) has been reliant on the central private network (N3/HSCN). In addition, organisations may have some locally provisioned Digital Services that have an interface to the national applications or a reliance on the central private network. It is critical that you understand and document these relationships.
You need to determine and document:
2. Add services being planned or commissioned
Review roadmaps and plans across the organisation and add any future Digital Services to your asset register.
Review your asset register
You should review the register with all stakeholders within your organisation, and any external organisations you share services with.
You need to ensure it is as accurate as possible, and identify dependencies across services.
3. Create an implementation plan
Once you have a definitive register of the Digital Services you will need to remediate or procure in line with the Internet First policy, you can begin to plan with suppliers and those you share services with.
Clinical safety
Clinical safety is a critical consideration in the development and implementation of Digital Services. View guidance on clinical safety standards.
User requirements
Planning should take current and future user requirements, and organisational strategy, into account. This could include:
- future business models and any future plans for citizen and patient access to services
- hosting
- future accessibility requirements
- types of devices used
- remote working capability
Technical considerations
You will need to look at technical considerations, including network sizing and cyber security standards.
View technical guidance for developing Digital Services to meet Internet First policy
Business change
A comprehensive implementation plan will build on your asset register to plan effectively for the necessary changes:
- allowing the right things to be done at the right time
- understanding the sequence of events
- allowing prioritisation of activity
- allowing business events to take place (governance, business cases, budgeting, approvals and so on) in good time
As you gain an understanding from suppliers of when and how changes will be implemented, and work with those you may provide services to, it is important to include changes to business operations in your plans.
These changes may include:
- how a user accesses the service
- authentication processes
- where you can access the services from – a service available over the public internet may allow users to access it remotely and this might involve purchasing remote working hardware.
Users may need new instructions on how a service is accessed and used, and this should be included in an implementation plan.
Implementation plans should be reviewed by all stakeholders.
Once this is complete, you can begin to put the planned actions into practice. This is likely to be in a deployment project type setting and in line with organisational governance.
Last edited: 13 June 2022 8:03 am