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==Expansion into Canada==
==Expansion into Canada==
As of 2005 Emis has expanded into Canada, starting out in British Columbia and working eastward. This seems to be a valuable move for Emis since Canada is now starting to switch all medical records to an electronic form.
As of 2005 Emis has expanded into Canada, starting out in British Columbia and working eastward. This seems to be a valuable move for Emis since Canada is now starting to switch all medical records to an electronic form.

==EMIS Australia==
In 2003 EMIS opened an office in Perth, Western Australia. Egton Software Services Australia employs 60 people, providing EMIS and EMIS Canada with offshore software development and testing resources.


==Charitable Donations==
==Charitable Donations==

Revision as of 13:25, 7 June 2009

Egton Medical Information Systems, known as EMIS, is a software company that develops and supplies computer systems used by over half of all General Practices in the United Kingdom,[1] and also internationally, to electronically store patient notes. Like other competitor systems, data includes all details of a patients medical history, acute and repeat medication record and results of blood and radiology investigations electronically posted back to a surgery from a hospital.

History of the company

EMIS began nearly 20 years ago in a rural dispensing practice in Egton near Whitby in North Yorkshire, where Dr Peter Sowerby wrote the software in association with co-author Dr David Stables.[2] EMIS currently supplies systems to over 55% of GP practices in England with a responsibility for over 39 million people’s patient records across 175,000 users. Turnover is over £54 million and they employ over 800 people in the United Kingdom.

National Programme for IT exclusion

EMIS was not one of the major current GP computer providers initially included in the proposed National Programme for IT due to issues surrounding the lack of system choice for GPs.[1]

The disenfranchisement of General Practitioners and the resultant political change which affected the NPFIT led to the creation of the GPSOC (General Practitioners System of Choice) programme which allowed individual GPs to choose their own system for storing electronic patient notes. At the current time EMIS are involved in the GPSOC programme.

As of 2007, of the 5000 practices using EMIS, 40% are now able to transfer notes electronically with the GP2GP electronic record transfer software to other practices using either EMIS or INPS Vision.[3]

Recent Financial History, profit after tax

2003 - £2,771,538.00
2004 - £4,358,642.00 (+57% on previous year)
2005 - £3,625,340.00 (-17% on previous year)
2006 - £2,481,039.00 (-32% on previous year)

Remuneration of Directors and Employees

As of 31 December 2006, EMIS had 5 directors. Peter Sowerby, David Stables, WA Jones, Sean Riddell and Andy Whitwarn. Each director was paid between £515,000 and £530,000 for the year ended 31 December 2006. The average pay of non-directors for this period was roughly £26,400.

Expansion into Canada

As of 2005 Emis has expanded into Canada, starting out in British Columbia and working eastward. This seems to be a valuable move for Emis since Canada is now starting to switch all medical records to an electronic form.

Charitable Donations

The most recent declared charitable donations made by the company were in 2005 (of £1,100 to St Peters School and Spina Bifida) but the company makes a number of anonymous charitable donations in cash or kind.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b "EMIS signs up to NPfIT -- The main supplier of GP systems in the country is now involved in the NHS IT programme after a prolonged stand off". Kable's Government Computing. 2005-03-23. Retrieved 2006-11-26.
  2. ^ "Company Profile". EMIS.
  3. ^ "EMIS Ahead Of Target On GP2GP Roll-Out". Medical News Today. 2007-10-05. Retrieved 2007-10-20.