-
Israel president tells AFP Europe should back efforts to 'eradicate' Hezbollah
-
Equities rise on oil easing, with focus on Iran war and central banks
-
Mbappe set for Real Madrid return against Man City
-
Nvidia rides 'claw' craze with AI agent platform
-
Alleged narco trafficker makes first US court appearance
-
Neymar misses out as Endrick returns to Brazil squad
-
South Lebanon's Christian towns insist they are not part of Israel-Hezbollah war
-
Alleged narco trafficker Marset makes first US court appearance
-
Securing the Strait of Hormuz: Tactics and threats
-
Cuba hit by total blackout as US fuel blockade bites
-
'Buffy' reboot cancelled: Sarah Michelle Gellar
-
Damaged Russian tanker has 700 tonnes of fuel on board: Moscow
-
PSG will go for the kill against Chelsea: Dembele
-
Afghan govt accuses Pakistan after new strikes on Kabul
-
Chelsea huddle not meant to 'antagonise' says Rosenior
-
Talks towards international panel to tackle 'inequality emergency' begin at UN
-
Trump pushes for 'enthusiasm' from allies to secure Hormuz
-
US, China hold 'constructive' talks on trade, but Trump visit in doubt
-
Laporta's new Barca chapter begins with Newcastle clash
-
EU talks energy as oil price soars
-
Out-of-favour Livingstone says 'no-one cares' in England set-up
-
Rising star Antonelli says Chinese GP triumph 'starting point' for F1 success
-
Stagflation risk in US 'quite high': Nobel-winning economist Stiglitz
-
Swiss government rejects proposal to limit immigration
-
Ingredients of life discovered in Ryugu asteroid samples
-
Why Iranian drones are hard to stop
-
Teen star Dowman ready to make impact for Arsenal says Arteta
-
Jones says England would be 'foolhardy' to sack Borthwick before Rugby World Cup
-
Man City must be 'perfect' to stun Real Madrid: Guardiola
-
Ntamack set for Toulouse return at Bordeaux-Begles
-
Hours-long fuel queues in Laos capital Vientiane
-
France threatens to block funds for India over climate inaction
-
Will Yemen's Houthis join the Mideast war?
-
Oscar winner Sean Penn skips ceremony to visit Kyiv
-
Rise of drone warfare sharpens focus on laser defense
-
Nepal welcomes first transgender lawmaker
-
Rooney says patience needed with Premier League record-breaker Dowman
-
Spain court rejects trial for ex-govt leader over deadly 2024 floods
-
"So proud": Irish hometown hails Oscar winner Jessie Buckley
-
'Hollywood story': Russia's Mr Nobody makes history with Oscar win
-
City boss Guardiola still has hope of revival against Real Madrid
-
Iran, at UN, insists will not submit to 'lawless aggression'
-
Appeal trial opens for France's Sarkozy over alleged Libyan funding
-
Szoboszlai warns time against Liverpool in quest for Champions League place
-
Israel army says begun 'limited targeted ground operations' against Hezbollah in south Lebanon
-
Western allies push back on Trump call for NATO help to reopen Hormuz
-
Central banks meet as Mideast war fuels inflation fears
-
European bank battle heats up as UniCredit swoops for Commerzbank
-
Oil eases on hopes for Strait of Hormuz passage
-
Race for Paris mayor on knife's edge after first round
Black Book Research Releases United Kingdom State of Acute Care EHR and Digital Healthcare 2026 Market Report
New 50-page market briefing finds the UK acute care IT market is being reshaped by four distinct NHS buying environments, near-universal EPR adoption pressure, NHS App scale, interoperability demands, and rising transformation risk scrutiny through 2030
LONDON, UK / ACCESS Newswire / March 16, 2026 / Black Book Research today announced the release of United Kingdom: State of Acute Care EHR and Digital Healthcare 2026, a Q1 2026 fifty-page market report examining how acute care digital transformation is unfolding across the four operationally distinct NHS environments of England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
The report concludes that the United Kingdom should no longer be viewed as a single digital health buyer archetype. Instead, it is four related but materially different procurement and delivery markets, each shaped by its own governance model, implementation structure, digital architecture, interoperability priorities, and vendor fit requirements.
Black Book Research finds that the UK enters 2026 with digital health no longer treated as a future-state ambition, but as an operational, procurement, and governance imperative. In England, accelerated frontline digitization, a push toward near-universal EPR coverage, and the growing role of the NHS App as the national digital front door are redefining what acute care buyers now expect from core platforms and surrounding digital infrastructure. At the same time, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland continue to follow distinct delivery models that materially affect buying behavior, deployment strategy, shared-care priorities, and supplier positioning.
The report highlights several market indicators underscoring the scale and direction of UK digital healthcare modernization:
91% of secondary care trusts in England already have an EPR in place, representing 187 of 206 trusts, with the national program forecasting 96% coverage by March 2026
The NHS App now has more than 39 million registered users, with 67.8 million repeat prescriptions ordered in the prior 12 months and 62.3 million logins in November 2025 alone
England's care delivery architecture now spans 42 Integrated Care Systems
NHS Scotland is organized around 14 territorial NHS Boards
In Wales, WelshPAS handles more than 2.6 billion transactions annually
In Northern Ireland, the national Encompass rollout has created one of Europe's most centralized digital care record environments
According to Black Book, those indicators are not simply signs of digitization progress. They are also clear signals that modernization in UK acute care is now being evaluated on a broader set of criteria than traditional EPR functionality alone. Buyers are increasingly judging digital healthcare strategies on patient access integration, operational productivity, interoperability maturity, migration readiness, cybersecurity posture, infrastructure resilience, and measurable delivery assurance.
The report evaluates the competitive landscape across enterprise acute EPR platforms, workflow-led systems, interoperability layers, analytics, and adjacent ecosystem categories. Representative vendors and market-shaping suppliers examined in the report include Epic, Oracle Health, System C, Nervecentre, Dedalus, InterSystems, MEDITECH, and Altera.
Black Book finds that supplier positioning now varies significantly depending on whether buyers prioritize enterprise consolidation, phased modernization, workflow orchestration, board-level alignment, patient engagement, national-scale interoperability, or post-go-live operational performance. In this environment, the report notes that competitive advantage is increasingly determined not only by product capability, but by implementation realism, governance strength, migration discipline, and the ability to deliver measurable operational impact after deployment.
The study identifiesseven forces reshaping UK acute care digital procurement from 2026 through 2030:
EPR coverage deadlines are accelerating the final wave of trust modernization
The NHS App is becoming a strategic integration requirement, not just a citizen-facing accessory
Devolved operating models are increasing the importance of market-specific positioning
Buyers are separating software acquisition cost from the true cost of transformation, including migration, data remediation, training, and adoption
Interoperability is shifting from interface delivery to an operational capability
Cyber resilience and infrastructure readiness remain embedded in business-case scrutiny
Competitive advantage is increasingly determined by delivery realism, governance strength, and post-go-live operational impact
The report is designed as a practical market briefing for healthcare technology vendors, investors, provider executives, strategists, and transformation leaders assessing where UK acute care IT demand is strengthening, how devolved market structures change competitive positioning, and which capabilities are becoming essential to win and deliver successfully in the next phase of NHS modernization.
Qualified industry stakeholders may download the full report at no cost at:
https://blackbookmarketresearch.com/state-of-acute-care-ehr-and-digital-health-care-united-kingdom-2026
About Black Book Research
Black Book is an independent healthcare competitive intelligence and market research firm that has surveyed and reported on healthcare IT, digital health, managed services, vendor performance, and industry trends since 2003. Vendor agnostic and mission driven, Black Book conducts transparent, methodologically rigorous research with no vendor interference, paid participation, subscriptions, conference sponsorship influence, or commercial fees tied to findings.
Its work is designed to improve healthcare delivery, strengthen provider satisfaction with IT and services, and support better patient and healthcare consumer outcomes at the lowest responsible cost. Black Book evaluates the full spectrum of healthcare software and services, including EHR/EPR platforms, interoperability, analytics, cybersecurity, patient engagement, consulting, outsourcing, implementation, managed services, and performance optimization.
In the United Kingdom, Black Book Research covers the full digital healthcare landscape across software and services, from consulting and transformation support to enterprise systems, interoperability, analytics, and operational enablement, providing buyers and stakeholders with clear, Trusted, unbiased insight into market performance and modernization readiness.
Media Contact: [email protected] +01.800.863.7590 https://www.blackbookmarketresearch.com
SOURCE: Black Book Research
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
L.Adams--AT