Building infrastructure is key to unifying UK health data
Technical, rather than bureaucratic, solutions are needed Reforming the NHS by shifting from analogue to digital, from treating sickness to prevention of disease, and from hospital to community care is a priority for the UK government.1 Better use of data will be central to achieving these shifts—revealing who is likely to become unwell, enabling predictive modelling, and simulating the effects of changing the location of care. The November 2024 publication of the Sudlow review of the UK’s health data systems2 is therefore timely. Commissioned by the chief medical officer for England, the review makes recommendations for overcoming barriers to linking and sharing data by streamlining control; standardising mechanisms, governance policies, and public engagement activities for data access; and broadening access to imaging and free text data. Currently, the UK’s health data infrastructure is outdated3 and fragmented, with datasets siloed across multiple locations4 and controlled by differ