Introduction to the Occupational Architecture

The Background

FEDIP is committed to establishing a cohesive framework of job roles within the health and care informatics profession. This initiative is anchored in an expanded  Government Digital and Data Profession Capability Framework (GDaD) framework, leveraging the Skills for the Information Age framework (SFIA). As we advance towards this goal, we are currently seeking valuable input from professionals like yourselves. 

The Challenge

The current landscape is characterized by a proliferation of job titles, descriptions, and pay bands within organisations. With the evolution and growth of digital roles, these positions have undergone changes, mergers, and adaptations to meet organisational needs. This has resulted in a myriad of job titles and roles with slight variations, inconsistent bandings, and differences in levels. 

The Solution

Enter the FEDIP Occupational Architecture—an innovative new database designed to consolidate job roles into families. This framework aims to provide transparency on the skills and qualifications required for each job role, along with suggested training materials. 

The Occupational Architecture brings together existing frameworks such as GDaD and SFIA, as well as specialist frameworks specific to health and care informatics, such as the National Competency Framework and the PKSB. This unified database simplifies the existing framework landscape. 

Why Is the Occupational Architecture Helpful?

Business Change

Business change – such as organisational restructures or mergers, where there are IT operations or technical teams merging.

Recruitment

All elements of recruitment – identify skills and competencies required for new roles, help to shape job adverts and use for interview processes. 

Career Progression

Career progression – career conversations, look at future roles and map out skills and competencies needed, create development plans.

Professional Registration

Professional registration – applying for professional registration with a professional body and being registered on the FEDIP public register as part of personal development activity.

How You Can Contribute 

The job families are now available to be reviewed on the website.

​We are inviting professionals in health and care informatics to provide feedback on the first set of role profiles published on our public website. This invaluable feedback will help refine and enhance our Occupational Architecture. 

Many of the GDaD job family roles have been completed through work undertaken with FEDIP member body BCS (the Chartered Institute for IT) and NHS England. These completed job families are now available to be reviewed on the website.

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