New Committee Positions Nursing Services as the Designated Clinical Authority for Nursing-Specific
Aspects of the Federation’s Historic HIS/EHR Transformation
The Ministry of Health is pleased to announce the formal establishment of the Nursing Informatics
Advisory Committee (NIAC). The NIAC has been constituted as a subcommittee of the Institutional
Nursing Services Clinical Governance Committee (INSCGC), operating across Institution-Based
Health Services (IBHS) and Community-Based Health Nursing Services (CBHS).
The formation of the NIAC represents a significant milestone in the Ministry of Health’s ongoing
national initiative to modernise healthcare service delivery through the implementation of a fully
integrated Hospital Information System (HIS) and its embedded Electronic Health Record (EHR)
platform. This digital health transformation — one of the most consequential technological
undertakings in the Federation’s healthcare history — is being implemented across IBHS and CBHS,
and is being facilitated in partnership with the St. Kitts Nevis Robotics Association, which has
provided technical support, systems training, and capacity-building expertise throughout the rollout
process.
The NIAC has been established in direct response to the demands of this implementation. As nursing
services constitute the largest clinical workforce within IBHS and CBHS, and bear primary and
ongoing
responsibility for patient assessment, care planning, medication management, and clinical
observation, it is essential that nursing interests are authoritatively represented at every stage of the
HIS/EHR implementation — from vendor engagement and system configuration through to testing,
deployment, and post-implementation optimisation.
The NIAC will serve as the designated clinical authority for all nursing-specific aspects of the HIS
implementation. Its mandate is to ensure that the digital platform and its supporting physical
infrastructure align with established nursing workflows, safeguard patient data integrity, comply with
Ministry of Health regulations, and uphold the clinical excellence standards mandated by the
INSCGC. The committee will work in close coordination with the Ministry’s information technology
team, the St. Kitts Nevis Robotics Association, and relevant clinical departments to ensure a seamless
and clinically sound transition to digital health records management.
The establishment of the NIAC reflects the broader commitment of nursing services to proactive
clinical governance, patient safety, and the responsible, evidence-informed adoption of health
information technology in service delivery across the institution. It also affirms the Ministry of
Health’s recognition that meaningful digital transformation in healthcare must be clinician-led — and
that the nursing profession, as the frontline of patient care, must be a central architect of the systems
through which that care is recorded and coordinated.
The Ministry of Health looks forward to the important work of the NIAC as the HIS/EHR rollout
continues to advance, and is confident that the committee’s clinical leadership will be instrumental in
ensuring that the Federation’s digital health infrastructure meets the highest standards of functionality,
safety, and patient-centred care.
Further details regarding the committee’s composition, terms of reference, and implementation
workplan are available from the Office of the Principal Nursing Officer upon request.

