UK Politics
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LOL. AIs help will would be significant, but not adequate on its own. It's just not at that level yet. I did this for Y2k in the financial industry and worked for the US medical industry in the early 2000s doing similar legacy migration.
The issue is distribution of solutions. The NHS has 50 years of random IT roll-outs, handling in very different ways with little unification. The system would need a huge change to unify the data formats and sharing policies. This on its own would take years to manage over such a large organisation that basically cant do the shut a system down and see what breaks diagnosis used by many to investigate old servers long since forgotten.
It's doable. AI will help staff do it faster. But it will still miss a lot, and live testing is way more dangerous than would ever be expected.
The best approach in my opinion would not only be to re-write everything and roll out a whole new system within every NHS and linked system. With a collection of APIs allowing all the old data types and interfaces used to link to that system. Then spend a year or 3 running them in parallel with staff using the old system. Using AI and skilled developers to hunt for and fix areas where data fails to get added/updated to the system as expected. Then slowly start moving staff over to the new system.
But its also the most expensive option and does little to address the human problem in such situations. IE basically risking repeating the London ambulance service IT roll out like issues.