-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 25
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
EPIC: Widen adoption of the service manual by including key professional-facing patterns in the design system #1755
Comments
In January, the NHS Service Manual team partnered with Snook to undertake a discovery into how the service manual and its associated products could better meet the needs of its users. A key theme of the outputs of discovery was that there is still an unmet need for those who want to create non-patient-facing services for the NHS. In 2021 a discovery was undertaken to look at this work which yielded some key areas we could improve the offering of non-patient-facing services. As part of the upcoming service manual roadmap, we want to pick up where this work left off and validate that the previous discovery is still a current need. We are currently working internally to discuss the scope and outcomes of this work but have agreed it is a key priority for the service manual once there is more team capacity. |
Lots of NHS applications use the Care Identity Service (CIS) to authenticate, allowing healthcare workers can access patient data. The user support content provided about CIS across services that use CIS authentication is inconsistent, and has gaps within services. The Care Identity Service would like to work with the NHS England content profession to create design patterns for supporting different CIS user types, which can be used by each service to provide consistent, accurate and up-to-date support for authentication. Here are a few example services that reference CIS, in different ways:
There's lots of good practice here, but it would be great to be more consistent |
We're kicking off work in this area with developing the Header for 'logged in' users #192. |
What
Following on from the discovery/audit of professional/staff-facing systems we now need to include key professional-facing patterns in the design system.
Why
Many of the patterns and styles used to improve the services provided to patients may be relevant to teams developing services for professionals.
Must
Should
Outcome
Increased use of the service manual across NHS Digital and greater standardisation across healthcare systems.
Work contributing to this epic:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: