NHS and IT aren't initials that sit comfortably together. The NHS Connecting for Health IT project was cancelled in 2011 having produced virtually the square root of nothing and having cost £10 Billion pounds.
This project is now used as a case study in poor Project Management!
(I was actually interviewed for a job on the project; it was a jaw dropping experience, we'll say).
Part of NHS IT called NHS Digital made headlines when they advised 10,000 patients to "shield", only to then realise that they had already died.
However the NHS firmly believes that it can create a contact tracing application.
Now, Apple and Google have already formed a partnership to create tools for contact tracing apps that would be available to third parties, like the NHS.
But no, the NHS want to do it themselves.
In the Daily Telegraph yesterday they said they were only "two or three weeks" away from rollout.
Well, I sincerely doubt that.
However quickly you develop the software there are a million and one things that can can wrong. Firstly you have to test the software and three weeks is no time at all to write it, let alone test it properly.
The NHS want to store all the data on a central server. Do they have a spare one lying around big enough to hold all the data? How do they propose to link all the smartphones to the server? Will the network be resilient? How are they going to manage backups and restores if necessary?
In my opinion they have precisely zero chance of getting all that up and running reliably in three months, let alone three weeks.
You don't re-invent the wheel and Apple and Google have a head start on the NHS in this field.
I do hope that I am wrong, but experience says that I won't be.