Reducing Diagnostic Duplication

with ORBIS U EPR

Why Diagnostic Duplication Still Burdens the NHS

In a system already stretched to its limits, the NHS cannot afford unnecessary repetition. And yet, every day, thousands of diagnostic tests are duplicated — not for medical necessity, but due to a lack of visibility, fragmented records, and outdated processes.

Redundant testing is not just a clinical inefficiency. It’s a silent drain on NHS resources, patient time, and workforce productivity.

But what if the solution didn’t require more people or more funding — just smarter workflows?

A hidden cost with very real consequences

Behind every repeated blood draw or unnecessary scan is a patient discomforted, a lab overloaded, and a clinician deprived of valuable time.
Studies suggest that up to 67% of diagnostic tests may be unnecessary or poorly timed, with most duplication errors occurring before the test even reaches the lab — during the request.

These are not isolated incidents. They are systemic.

The problem is rooted in the pre-analytical phase, where paper forms, disjointed systems, and lack of test order visibility prevent clinicians from making fully informed decisions.

ORBIS U EPR: A digital fix to a costly analogue problem

A newly released white paper explores how digital requesting within ORBIS U EPR can radically reduce diagnostic duplication by embedding clinical intelligence directly into the ordering process — without disrupting clinical flow.

Key features include:

  • Real-time visibility of previous test orders and results — directly within the ordering interface.
  • Context-aware alerts that warn clinicians when tests are ordered too soon after a previous request.
  • Embedded clinical decision support aligned with NHS guidelines, helping clinicians order only what’s appropriate — and when.

This isn’t just digitisation. It’s intelligent clinical enablement.

The full white paper outlines real-world examples of these mechanisms in action — including up to 47% reduction in unnecessary tests.

What’s at stake: cost, efficiency, and patient safety

The financial and clinical implications are considerable. By reducing duplication at the source, Trusts can:

  • Save on materials, lab time, and administrative processing
  • Improve workflow efficiency and reduce cognitive load
  • Protect patients from repeat procedures and potential false positives
  • Free up clinical and lab capacity for truly necessary interventions

All while supporting a safer, data-driven NHS.

The paper includes detailed evidence, modelling and references — showing how digital requesting reduces both waste and clinical risk.

Making it work: more than just a tool

Successful implementation of ORBIS U EPR’s digital requesting isn’t just about technology. It requires:

  • Clinical engagement from day one
  • Redesigned workflows that align with SOPs
  • Executive support and interdepartmental collaboration

The white paper provides a roadmap — including enablers, governance tips, and future-facing innovations like AI-based recommendations and interoperability with NHS App and Shared Care Records.

This is digital transformation done right: practical, scalable, and deeply aligned with NHS strategic goals.

Don’t just digitise — de-risk

Diagnostic test duplication is not inevitable. It’s preventable.
And with tools like ORBIS U, NHS Trusts have a clear path to do just that.

But to make informed decisions — and build the business case — you need the full picture.

What’s inside the full white paper

 


Download the full pdf

Explore:

  • The hidden vulnerabilities in the Total Testing Process
  • How Orbis EPR addresses duplication at the pre-analytical stage
  • NHS-aligned evidence supporting digital requesting
  • The organisational enablers for large-scale success
  • Future innovations in AI, interoperability and mobile access

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