Digital Health’s monthly roundup of contracts and go lives
- 13 February 2026
This contracts and go lives roundup includes electronic prescribing and medicines administration (ePMA) system go-lives at Wrexham Maelor Hospital and Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust.
Wrexham Maelor Hospital rolls out ePMA system
Wrexham Maelor Hospital, part of Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCU), implemented an ePMA system from supplier Better.
An early adopter implementation took place in the Heddfan Psychiatric Unit of the hospital in December 2025 before a wider rollout across all inpatient wards.
Clinical teams worked together to manually transcribe more than 600 inpatients onto the Better Meds system over a three-day period, before supporting ward teams to transition to electronic prescribing as part of routine patient care.
Aneurin Bevan University Health Board rolls out Clinisys WinPath
The Blood Transfusion service at Aneurin Bevan University Health Board (ABUHB) went live with Clinisys WinPath. The service is a long-standing user of Clinisys laboratory information management systems (LIMS), but its LabCentre LIMS had reached end of life.
Clinsys worked with the health board to ensure the latest version of its LIMS would support local workflows, culminating in the deployment of Clinisys WinPath in September 2025.
Two major UK hospitals to deploy AI to help detect infections
Sanome announced partnerships with The Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability and East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust.
The firm’s MEMORI solution is an AI-powered clinical decision support tool that helps clinicians detect hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) earlier.
The technology went live at The Royal Hospital for Neuro-disability in December 2025, with bedside go-live dates at East Kent Hospitals scheduled for the coming months and additional NHS deployments planned throughout 2026.
Worcestershire Acute Hospitals launches electronic prescribing
Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust went live with an ePMA system.
Altera Digital Health’s Sunrise was launched across 56 inpatient wards and urgent care areas across the trust’s three hospital sites in November 2025 to digitise disparate and paper-based workflows.
The system is intended to streamline the electronic discharge process by ensuring that discharge medication orders are immediately available for dispensing, helping to avoid delays resulting from the transfer of the paper medication chart from ward to pharmacy.
Mid Yorkshire signs 10-year EPR deal with Nervecentre
Mid Yorkshire Teaching NHS Trust signed a 10-year contract with Nervecentre to implement its electronic patient record (EPR) system.
Mid Yorkshire and Nervecentre signed the contract at the beginning of February 2026, following the firm’s selection as the preferred EPR supplier in December 2025 and the allocation of funding for the system from NHS England.
Nervecentre’s cloud-based system is aimed to further digitise healthcare services at Mid Yorkshire and provide clinical staff with access to real-time medical records. It will be implemented at Mid Yorkshire on a phased basis over a two-year period.
