Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:
To ask His Majesty's Government whether funding is allocated to implementing artificial intelligence in the NHS, in particular technology for supporting patient diagnosis; and if so, what proportion of NHS funding is allocated for that purpose.
We will transform diagnostic services and will support the National Health Service to speed up waiting times for diagnostic tests, including through supporting the roll-out of artificial intelligence (AI). Shorter diagnostic waiting times are a crucial part of reducing overall waiting times and returning to the referral to treatment 18-week standard.
No current assessment has been made on the extent to which AI is being used in the NHS for diagnosing patients. Whilst some funding has been allocated for AI diagnostics, the full proportion of allocated NHS funding is not held.
Against a backdrop of increasing demand for NHS services and significant workforce pressures, AI presents significant opportunities for improving the delivery of care and outcomes for patients. AI tools have the potential to make healthcare more timely, effective, and accessible to the public. To make the most of these opportunities, the Prime Minister has accepted all 50 recommendations of Matt Clifford's AI Opportunities Action Plan.
Through the AI in Health and Care Award, £113 million has been provided to test and evaluate AI technologies in crucial areas, such as imaging and diagnostics. This funding is helping us to generate the evidence needed to deploy effective AI tools across the NHS and improve the lives and health outcomes of our population.
The Department is also focusing the £21 million AI Diagnostic Fund on the deployment of technologies in key, high-demand areas such as chest X-rays and chest computed tomography scans to enable faster diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer in over half of acute trusts in England.
The 2025 Spending Review settlement commits to a major transformation of care delivery, moving from analogue to digital systems, hospital to community-based care, and from treatment to prevention. To support this, the NHS productivity plan is backed by a nearly 50% increase to NHS technology and digital transformation spend since 2025/26, with a total investment of up to £10 billion by 2028/29.
This investment builds upon existing funding that the NHS has directed towards significantly innovating technology in diagnostics, including AI, across the NHS.