NHS England is deploying Microsoft 365 Copilot to 505,000 clinicians and support staff after what Microsoft and NHS England described as the "largest AI trial of its kind globally in healthcare." The earlier pilot, which gave 30,000 NHS workers access to the AI assistant, showed an average time saving of 43 minutes per worker per day — roughly five working weeks per year, according to TechRadar.
Pilot success drives expansion
The pilot program demonstrated that the average worker using M365 Copilot gained back 43 minutes per day. NHS England estimates the broader rollout could save millions of hours annually. The healthcare provider hopes to reduce the administrative burden clinicians face, improving productivity and cutting operational costs.
Key pilot results:
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Pilot participants | 30,000 NHS workers |
| Time saved per worker per day | 43 minutes |
| Equivalent per year | ~5 working weeks |
| Target full rollout | 505,000 staff |
Rollout plan and training
NHS England plans to onboard 200,000 users within the first six months and up to 505,000 workers within a year through an "extensive training and adoption program." The subscription includes Copilot Studio, a tool for building AI agents without requiring workers to be AI experts.
Key job roles and expected benefits
Microsoft highlighted five key job roles set to benefit most: clinical administration, ward clerks, medical secretaries, core services, and management. Copilot will support writing, information retrieval, summarization, and analysis.
"By rolling out Microsoft Copilot across the NHS, we can reduce that burden, free up clinicians' time and help staff focus on what they do best, caring for patients," UK Health Innovation and Safety Minister Preet Kaur Gill said.
"The potential to save clinical staff nearly a day's worth of admin time every fortnight could be a gamechanger for patients," added NHS England Chief Digital, Data and Technology Officer Rob Thompson, referencing the Government's '10 Year Health Plan for England' and broader 'Plan for Change'.
"Bringing AI safely into the flow of healthcare will help ease pressures, improve productivity, and support better decision-making across the health service," said Microsoft UK&I CEO Darren Hardman.
Implementation challenges and lessons from Wales
Despite the pilot's apparent success, larger-scale adoption brings challenges. Staff training and digital literacy remain major barriers, while the organization must address governance, policies, and strategies.
Across the border in Wales, similar M365 rollouts in counties like Rhondda Cynon Taf, Swansea, and Carmarthenshire have succeeded by using internal AI champions. "We use a lot of our own practitioners to teach other practitioners," one spokesperson told IT Pro, according to TechRadar.
The NHS England deployment is expected to be one of the largest enterprise AI rollouts in the public sector globally.