BlackBerry is targeting a number of enterprises with its new mobile operating system – BlackBerry 10 – and one of the first organisations to sign up is the Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Foundation Trust (BSMHFT).

The BSMHFT is one of the largest mental health trusts in the UK. Although it only serves a small number of inpatient units, its 4,500 staff treat many more in their homes across the region.

As a result, it is very important to the trust to have a strong and reliable mobile strategy.

“We have to be out and about to visit patients and it is fundamental that we can work whilst we are on the move,” says Stephen Asante-Boakye, head of technical services for the BSMHFT.

“We do our best diagnosis and work when we are out with the patients so if we can see more people, we can diagnose more and help more, which is better for everyone.”

The trust was already using BlackBerry for its remote workers – for email, calendar and secure connections to the back office – but wanted to raise its game.

“We have used BlackBerry for a number of years for the usual features that everyone uses and we didn’t have too many lows. Moving to BlackBerry 10 can move our staff into an even more secure environment,” Asante-Boakye adds.

The BSMHFT has been trialing the new system on 30 BlackBerry PlayBook tablets to give staff an idea of the new system.

“BlackBerry 10 is a new way of working,” says Asante-Boakye.

“Often with a new set of BlackBerrys in you could just give one to an employee and they can walk away, leave them alone and they will work it out. With BlackBerry 10 and a number of the new features, it is new to them.”

Data security in the health trust One of the technical lead’s favourite features is BlackBerry Balance, which gives the option of two different homescreens on one handset, keeping personal applications away from the corporate network on the same device. We do our best diagnosis and work when we are out with the patients so if we can see more people, we can diagnose more and help more Stephen Asante-Boakye, head of technical services for the BSMHFT “Features like BlackBerry Balance make a big difference,” he says. “It allows people to integrate their work lives and personal lives into one device. People work differently and by being able to have everything to hand means we can be more flexible but be just as secure.” And it is that security that is key to an organisation such as BSMHFT. The staff deal with highly sensitive patient information and privacy must be paramount. “We have resisted the temptation of BYOD,” says Asante-Boakye. “It is not that the technology isn’t there but it's more of a policy thing, ensuring everyone sticks to what they can do with the device and how they are allowed to connect to the network. As a mental health trust, it is a minefield for us.”