Epic lands £222m federated EPR contract in Somerset and Dorset

Epic lands £222m federated EPR contract in Somerset and Dorset
Epic lands £222m federated EPR contract in Somerset and Dorset

In early March 2026, a conglomerate of four NHS Trusts in Somerset and Dorset announced that they had signed a £222 million contract with US electronic patient records (EPR) giant Epic, in a radical move that seeks to replace legacy EPR and clinical systems with an enterprise-wide federated solution. The four trusts – Somerset NHS FT, Dorset Country Hospital NHS FT, University Hospitals Dorset NHS FT and Dorset Healthcare University NHS FT – join a list of 14 other NHS trusts currently employing an Epic EPR. Epic has had reasonable success in some of the country’s largest urban NHS trusts, such as Greater Manchester and Guy’s and St Thomas’, as well as having a healthy presence in the rest of the London trusts. However, acquiring this collection of more rural providers is a slight change for the supplier, although it is not Epic’s first foray into the South West, having won a contract with Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS FT and Torbay, and South Devon NHS FT.

EPRs play a central role in the digital strategy of all NHS trusts and, as such, much attention is paid to choosing the right partner for this critical digital infrastructure. The direction the NHS EPR market will take is clear, with a shift towards larger enterprise-wide solutions and even regional implementation in some cases. This aligns with the wider trend of consolidation underway across NHS England, with six ICBs merging from April, with further mergers expected before NHS England abolishes in April 2027 and ICBs being grouped together to improve efficiency. As healthcare agencies across the country consolidate, the acquisition of digital systems will similarly consolidate.

This latest example from Epic is a perfect example of this change. Epic had an advantage in the region, having already had some regional presence with Devon & Torbay’s victory last year. As is often the case with the NHS, organizations are influenced by their neighbors in their choice of technology. This has put Epic’s EPR in a strong position to win over more trusts in the South West.

A unified EPR across multiple trusts promises benefits: fewer systems to log into; optimized workflows for physicians; shared digital tools to reduce duplicate data entry; more consistent access to patient records. These efficiencies are especially significant in rural settings where interoperability between sites has historically been spotty.

But additional value arises when data can be easily shared and accessed across all trusts from a single EPR provider. Epic’s implementation of separate instances of its EPR may be an obstacle to data sharing between different geographic areas. Other difficulties also arise, such as the need for different patient engagement applications in different instances of your EPR, making the patient experience difficult.

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