23 Jun 2026

New techUK white paper: Why digital adult social care transformation is central to the future of the NHS

techUK has today launched a new flagship white paper, Why digital adult social care transformation is central to the future of the NHS, setting out why adult social care must sit at the heart of NHS reform and how the technology to deliver it is already here.

    

Developed through the techUK Social Care Working Group, the paper was launched at the techUK CareTech Conference 2026, where keynote addresses were delivered by Stephen Kinnock MP, Minister of State for Care, and Isaac Samuels OBE.

The paper argues that the NHS 10-Year Plan's three strategic shifts, hospital to community, analogue to digital, and sickness to prevention, all depend on what happens in people's homes and neighbourhoods, where adult social care already operates at scale. The technologies needed to support that shift, predictive monitoring, interoperable records, AI-enabled decision support and digital telecare, are mature and already deployed. What is missing, the paper argues, is the coordination layer around them: aligned commissioning, consolidated data standards, joined-up assurance, stronger interoperability and shared accountability across health, care, government and industry.

Crucially, the paper makes the case that much of this can be acted on now. Rather than waiting for longer-term reform and funding settlements, it calls for existing money to be redirected and pooled more effectively, through NHS prevention funding, the Better Care Fund and Section 75 flexibilities, so prevention investment reaches the parts of the system where it delivers the greatest impact.

The launch is especially timely. The 10-Year Plan, the Casey Commission, Local Government Reorganisation, the analogue-to-digital telecare transition and national interoperability programmes are all converging, and the paper warns they risk progressing independently rather than reinforcing one another.

What's in the paper

Drawing on real deployment evidence from across the sector, the paper includes case studies from organisations including Kyndi and Medway Council, Aico and Selwood Housing, Archangel and Bield Housing and Care, Rethink Partners and the Royal Borough of Greenwich, The Access Group and Derbyshire County Council, CoolCare, Ally Cares, and System C and Suffolk County Council, alongside thought leadership from Civica and Tunstall.

It concludes with clear, action-oriented recommendations for national government, local authorities, strategic authorities, the NHS, ICSs and ICBs, and sets out the principles on which industry stands ready to engage.

Among the immediate steps the paper identifies for Ministers are mandating minimum interoperability standards for adult social care built on open APIs, making existing prevention funding explicitly available for service redesign as well as technology, and moving towards a single, proportionate assurance regime recognised across CQC, DTAC, DSPT and MHRA to reduce duplication for suppliers, particularly SMEs.

techUK Report Why digital adult social care transformation is central to the future of the NHS June 2026 front cover.png

 

Login or register to download the full report

This report is available to everyone. Log in or sign up for free to download the full report.

Login or register here

There is now a groundswell of evidence that digital solutions can significantly benefit those who need social care, health and housing... It is only through concerted action by government, national bodies, the NHS, those representing local government and social care, housing and health providers, along with the tech industry, that we will be able to implement and scale the innovative solutions that are within our grasp.

Sir David Pearson CBE

Chair of TEC Quality, in the foreword

The technology to deliver the 10-Year Plan's ambitions already exists; what remains is the coordination to deploy it at scale. The techUK Social Care Working Group will continue to convene the sector, advocate for the policy and commissioning changes the paper sets out, and help shape national programmes.


Robert Walker

Robert Walker

Head of Health & Social Care, techUK

Rachel Kennedy

Rachel Kennedy

Programme Manager Health and Social Care, techUK

Lewis Stewart

Lewis Stewart

Programme Manager ‑ Health and Social Care, techUK

Viola Pastorino

Viola Pastorino

Junior Programme Manager, Health and Care Team, techUK

Health and Social Care Programme activities

techUK is helping its members navigate the complex space of digital health in the UK to ensure our NHS and social care sector is prepared for the challenges of the future. We help validate new ideas and build impactful strategies, ultimately ensuring that members are market-ready. Visit the programme page here.

 

Upcoming events

Latest news and insights 

Learn more and get involved

 

Health and Social Care updates

Sign-up to get the latest updates and opportunities from our Health and Social Care programme.

 

 

Here are the five reasons to join the Health and Social Care Programme

Download

Join techUK groups

techUK members can get involved in our work by joining our groups, and stay up to date with the latest meetings and opportunities in the programme.

Learn more

Become a techUK member

Our members develop strong networks, build meaningful partnerships and grow their businesses as we all work together to create a thriving environment where industry, government and stakeholders come together to realise the positive outcomes tech can deliver.

Learn more