My Lords, these regulations were laid before the House on 25 March 2025. If approved, they will make provision about the new procedure that must be followed by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care and/or NHS England when preparing and publishing information standards. Information standards relate to the processing of health and adult social care information. They can facilitate information to be shared easily, in real time, between health and adult social care organisations, providing a common set of requirements that must be followed. They are fundamental to ensuring interoperability and delivering a more integrated system in health and social care.
Currently, the health and adult social care system lacks a joined-up approach to technology and data solutions. This is in part due to low compliance with information standards, which are not yet mandatory. This makes it hard to achieve change or deliver improvements that are consistent across health and adult social care. For the health and adult social care system to work effectively, data needs to be processed in a transparent and standardised way, using common specifications, so that it can be understood and used by health and care professionals across different settings. To be effective, standards should be mandatory, as they will be in the near future, following commencement of the relevant provisions in the Health and Care Act 2022.
Noble Lords will appreciate that this was legislation made under the previous Government. I would hope that the current Government, in taking this forward, indicate a degree of unanimity on the need for a good system of standards, which support interoperability. Existing standards have not undergone a standardised approach to their preparation or review. This inconsistency has contributed to low compliance with information standards, which has made it harder for health and adult social care providers to understand what they are being asked to do and for data to be easily shared between different services.
Building on the provision in the Health and Social Care Act 2012, the Health and Social Care Act 2022 makes compliance with information standards mandatory. These procedural regulations that we are considering today set out a specific process that must be followed in developing and publishing all information standards going forward. Parliament permitting, once the Data (Use and Access) Bill becomes law, they will be mandatory for not just providers of health and adult social care services but the IT providers with which they contract.
I draw noble Lords’ attention to the element of consultation that the regulations would require. This has also been part of the process of developing these regulations, as there has been a public consultation and extensive engagement with stakeholders to ensure that we get this right; an impact assessment has also been published. The procedures outlined in this instrument have therefore been carefully considered and developed, taking into account views from stakeholders across the health and care sector. They will ensure that information standards are fit for purpose, kept up to date and reviewed regularly as needed; and that they keep pace with technical developments and evolving priorities. I beg to move.