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Disrupting UK Private Care: Why Surgeons Shouldn’t Spend Sundays Writing Invoices

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As National Health System delays persist and more Britons turn to private care, Andrew Archibald argues the real bottleneck is not medical talent but broken infrastructure. MEDMIN helps consultants offload admin, billing, and patient coordination so private practice can work like a modern business.

TAMPA BAY, Fla., July 9, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The UK has not met its 18-week referral-to-treatment target since 2015, and by the end of March 2026, 6.02 million patients in England were still waiting for 7.11 million hospital treatments. At the same time, demand for private care has climbed, with nearly one in eight inhabitants holding private medical insurance. Yet the consultants expected to absorb that overflow are still working within a private practice system that runs like a fragmented industry. On this episode of Disruption Interruption, host Karla Jo Helms (KJ) speaks with Andrew Archibald, CEO of MEDMIN, about why the UK’s private healthcare journey remains operationally broken, why top consultants are still functioning like amateur office managers, and why fixing the patient experience starts with fixing systems around the doctor. As Archibald puts it, “people have just learnt to put up with inadequate systems.”

Why Private Practice Still Feels Stuck in the Past

Archibald says the structure of UK private practice is the root of the problem. Most consultants still spend the bulk of their week in the National Health Service (NHS), where systems, staffing, and operational support are provided for them. But the moment they step into private practice, they become sole traders responsible for everything else. “These incredibly capable people,” he says, “are suddenly expected to handle really mundane tasks far outside the work they were trained to do.”

He still speaks to consultants who spend Sunday mornings going through invoices instead of recovering from the week or spending time with family. Over time, they patch together note-taking support, billing agencies, accountants, record systems, and ad hoc admin help, but the pieces do not work as one. The experience is clumsy for the consultant and equally frustrating for the patient trying to navigate it.

The issue is cultural as much as operational. The UK system has long been shaped by scarcity, since both doctors and patients have become too used to substandard admin, poor communication, and outdated technology. In Archibald’s words, “The healthcare system in the UK is very poor at investing in technology, in the administrative things that make the whole thing get better.” What should feel like a specialist care journey often feels, instead, like a workaround.

Building the Business Around the Doctor

MEDMIN was built to remove that extra task for clinicians.  The company as a total practice management partner that takes care of the operational layer around private practice, from billing and note management to insurer registration, hospital onboarding, patient communication, and profile marketing. Instead of asking consultants to figure out private practice by trial and error, MEDMIN gives them a system.

The model is built for doctors entering private practice for the first time. It helps new consultants get set up with hospitals, insurers, systems, and patient-facing tools, while also steering them toward the right local opportunities instead of the most obvious or prestigious ones. The company’s internal data shows that consultants who join MEDMIN as new-to-practice doctors grow their earnings by 300% between year one and year three.

For Archibald, the next step is not just scaling support across the UK, but using AI to remove even more friction from the healthcare journey. MEDMIN is already developing an AI-powered medical administrative assistant that can take routine tasks off human teams, but his larger point extends beyond technology. UK healthcare does not need more people tolerating broken systems. It needs people willing to challenge them. In his words, “People have just got used to poor systems and poor services, and they kind of accept it. And it’s about time to say, ‘stop accepting it.'”

Links

Disrupting the UK’s Healthcare Journey: Why It’s Easier to Book a Flight Than a Surgery, with Andrew Archibald

Disruption Interruption is the podcast where you will hear from today’s biggest Industry Disruptors. Learn what motivated them to bring about innovation and how they overcame opposition to adoption.

https://omny.fm/shows/disruption-interruption/disrupting-the-uks-healthcare-journey-why-it-s-easier-to-book-a-flight-than-a-surgery-with-andrew-archibald

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-archibald-363050a
Company Website:https://medmin.co.uk

About Disruption Interruption™
Disruption is happening on an unprecedented scale, impacting all manner of industries — MedTech, Finance, IT, eCommerce, shipping, logistics, and more — and COVID has moved their timelines up a full decade or more. But WHO are these disruptors and when did they say, “THAT’S IT! I’VE HAD IT!”? Time to Disrupt and Interrupt with host Karla Jo “KJ” Helms, veteran communications disruptor. KJ interviews badasses who are disrupting their industries and altering economic networks that have become antiquated with an establishment resistant to progress. She delves into uncovering secrets from industry rebels and quiet revolutionaries that uncover common traits — and not-so-common — that are changing our economic markets… and lives. Visit the world’s key pioneers that persist to success, despite arrows in their backs at www.disruption-interruption.com.

About Andrew Archibald
Andrew Archibald is the CEO of MEDMIN and a healthcare operations leader driven by a long-standing curiosity about how systems work, why they break, and how they can be improved. With more than 20 years in healthcare and change-focused roles that span transformation, operations, and growth, he joined MEDMIN to help scale the Birmingham-based business into a UK-wide platform for private consultants and patients. At MEDMIN, he works to turn fragmented private practice into a more seamless experience by combining operational infrastructure, patient-facing support, and technology that frees doctors to focus on medicine rather than administration.

About Karla Jo Helms
Karla Jo Helms is the Chief Evangelist and Anti-PR® Strategist for JOTO PR Disruptors™. Karla Jo learned firsthand how unforgiving business can be when millions of dollars are on the line — and how the control of public opinion often determines whether one company is happily chosen, or another is brutally rejected. Being an alumnus of crisis management, Karla Jo has worked with litigation attorneys, private investigators, and the media to help restore companies of goodwill into the good graces of public opinion — Karla Jo operates on the ethic of getting it right the first time, not relying on second chances and doing what it takes to excel. Helms speaks globally on public relations, how the PR industry itself has lost its way, and how, in the right hands, corporations can harness the power of Anti-PR to drive markets and impact market perception.

References

Campbell, D. (2025, January 30). Almost one in eight Britons now has private medical insurance, say healthcare analysts. The Guardian. theguardian.com/society/2025/jan/30/almost-one-in-eight-britons-now-has-private-medical-insurance-say-healthcare-analystsCampbell, D. (2025, March 20). Starmer unlikely to fulfil pledge on hospital waiting times, says IFS. The Guardian. theguardian.com/society/2025/mar/20/starmer-unlikely-to-fulfil-pledge-on-hospital-waiting-times-says-ifsFinancial Times. (2026, May 30). NHS hospitals hit key target on waiting times in boost for Wes Streeting. ft.com/content/61d8217a-1e30-4a96-9fbe-e8536827a3f9?

Media Inquiries:
Karla Jo Helms
JOTO PR™ 
727-777-4629

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RecordPoint launches global partner program as AI adoption drives surge in data governance demand

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New channel-first strategy gives resellers, consultancies and systems integrators a route into the fastest-growing budget line in regulated IT

SEATTLE, July 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — RecordPoint, the global data and AI governance platform, today announced the launch of its Global Partner Program, a formal channel program enabling partners to resell, co-sell and refer RecordPoint’s technology to their customers.

The launch marks a strategic shift to a channel-first business model for RecordPoint, designed to help partners capitalise on rapidly growing demand for data and AI governance as organisations scale AI adoption.

“Every regulated organisation deploying AI right now is discovering the same thing: you cannot govern AI without first governing your data,” RecordPoint CEO Anthony Woodward said.

“Data governance and AI governance have converged into a single conversation in every boardroom. AI is only as trustworthy as the data underneath it, and that realisation has turned data governance from a compliance line item into one of the fastest-growing budget priorities in enterprise IT.”

The program offers two tracks. A reseller track spans four tiers — Aggregator, Certified, Select and Premier — with the entry-level Aggregator tier carrying no revenue requirement and handling software procurement and fulfilment, while higher tiers unlock greater margins in line with increasing revenue commitments. A parallel referral and co-sell track allows partners to work alongside RecordPoint’s own sales teams. All partners complete technical and sales certifications before transacting, ensuring customers receive consistent expertise across the ecosystem.

RecordPoint positions itself as complementary to, not competitive with, its partners’ services businesses: the platform is RecordPoint’s, while configuration, file plans and the client relationship remain the partner’s to own.

The program will be led by Christian Lucarelli, VP Global Partner Sales & Strategy, who joined RecordPoint in January from process intelligence and automation vendor Nintex, where he spent nearly a decade in senior leadership roles, most recently heading the company’s global partner program.

“We’ve built this program so partners can monetise the data and AI governance opportunity from day one,” Lucarelli said. “Certified enablement, deal registration, joint marketing and a customer book of named logos partners can lead with — the infrastructure is all there.”

To support the program, RecordPoint is launching a new partner portal alongside dedicated enablement tracks covering sales, commercial, technical and delivery skills. The company has also committed partner marketing funds and co-branding resources, with deal registration and access to Microsoft’s co-sell motion available to participating partners.

Woodward said the move reflects how buying behaviour has changed. “Organizations don’t want to buy point software anymore. They want a partner who can advise on their entire data and AI strategy. RecordPoint provides the technology layer, and our partners bring the consulting, frameworks and implementation services that wrap around it. Together, that’s the complete offering regulated organizations are asking for.”

“We’ve reached the scale where the channel is the right lever to accelerate growth,” Woodward added. “Our partners get a platform purpose-built for the conversation their customers are already having, backed by fifteen years of authority running the data lifecycle inside the world’s most regulated organizations.”

The program serves organizations globally including national and regional systems integrators, specialist data and information governance consultancies, managed service providers, Microsoft 365 and cloud advisory firms, and Big 4 advisory practices.

Learn more and register for RecordPoint’s Partner Program launch and first Quarterly Partner Update on 23 July:

RecordPoint Quarterly Partner Update – July 2026 (APAC) Webinar

RecordPoint Quarterly Partner Update – July 2026 (NA) Webinar

You can also apply for the program at recordpoint.com/partner.

About RecordPoint

Founded in 2009 and headquartered in Sydney, RecordPoint is a global data-trust platform that enables organizations to discover, govern and control their information across systems, clouds and repositories. The platform provides AI-driven classification, regulatory compliance, lifecycle management and defensible disposal at enterprise scale. RecordPoint serves leading financial services institutions, government agencies and regulated industries worldwide.

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/recordpoint-launches-global-partner-program-as-ai-adoption-drives-surge-in-data-governance-demand-302821861.html

SOURCE RecordPoint

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WYF Launches Global AI Talent Compact at AI for Good Global Summit 2026

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GENEVA, July 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — World Youth Forum (WYF), an international nonprofit advancing challenge-based learning and youth development across more than 30 countries, today launched the Global AI Talent Compact at the AI for Good Global Summit 2026 in Geneva, where WYF served as an official session partner.

The summit, organized by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in partnership with more than 50 UN agencies and co-convened with the Government of Switzerland, is the United Nations’ leading platform on artificial intelligence.

The Compact establishes an open global action network built on five commitments: expanding access to AI literacy; defining the human capabilities that matter most in the AI era; scaling real-world, challenge- and project-based learning; safeguarding youth well-being; and recognizing ability through evidence of real work, not credentials alone.

“AI is changing not only how young people learn and create, but how talent is identified and recognized,” said Houston Hou, Global Executive Convener of WYF. “Young people need pathways through which real ability can be seen, trusted and connected. The Compact is an open invitation to build those pathways together.”

The launch convened leaders from across the UN system, academia and youth innovation, including Fabrizio Hochschild, former UN Under-Secretary-General; Frédéric Werner, Head of Strategic Engagement, AI for Good, ITU; and Ben Nelson, Chairman and CEO of Minerva Project. Alongside speakers from AI Singapore (AISG), the ASEAN Foundation, the International Trade Centre (ITC), the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD), the United Nations University (UNU), and student AI communities including the Imperial AI Group, the Oxford Guild, the University of Toronto Machine Intelligence Student Team (UTMIST) and the Global AI Alliance at Penn. The Global SDGs and Leadership Development Center served as supporting partner of the session.

Following the launch, WYF will convene founding supporters worldwide — universities, student AI societies, education and innovation organizations, and industry partners — to advance year-round, challenge-based AI learning, new forms of talent recognition, and pathways connecting young talent with real-world opportunities.

About World Youth Forum

WYF is an international nonprofit youth development platform. Through educational programmes, competitions, international conferences and youth-led initiatives, WYF engages more than 500,000 young people annually across more than 30 countries.

 

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SOURCE World Youth Forum (WYF)

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UK mid-market growth masks stagnation, reveals Price Bailey

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LONDON, July 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Price Bailey’s Mid-Market index shows revenue growth barely keeping pace with inflation as profits come under pressure.

UK mid–market companies are delivering headline revenue growth, but for most businesses this is barely outpacing inflation and is failing to translate into stronger profits, according to new research by Price Bailey, the leading accountancy firm. 

The Price Bailey Mid–Market Index 2026, which analysed 12,625 UK businesses with revenues between £10m and £250m across 16 sectors, found that average revenue growth continues to be driven by a small number of high–performing outliers rather than broader growth. 

While mean compound annual revenue growth stands at 12%, the median business is growing at just 6%, only slightly ahead of average inflation of 5.3% over the period. This gap highlights the pressure facing mid–market companies operating in a challenging economic environment. 

The research goes on to show that revenue growth across UK regions remains modest for the typical business, with median growth only marginally above inflation in most areas. London displays the widest gap between top–performing companies and the median. 

Sector analysis suggests that the strongest performers are businesses with the ability to protect or increase prices, those sectors with limited pricing flexibility are more likely to see growth eroded by inflationary pressures. 

According to the data, revenue growth is not feeding through into profit growth. EBITDA and profit after tax for mid–sized companies have failed to keep pace with rising revenues in recent years, meaning many businesses are working harder simply to stand still. This trend has implications for shareholders and business owners, as higher turnover does not necessarily equate to improved returns. 

Commenting on the findings, Chand Chudasama, member of the Board and Partner in the Strategy and Corporate Finance team at Price Bailey says: “The headline figures suggest growth, but when you look beneath the surface a different picture emerges. For many mid–market businesses, revenue increases are being absorbed by inflation and cost pressures, while profits remain stubbornly flat. The real differentiator now, is pricing power.” 

More data is available on in the Price Bailey Mid-Market Index, on the Price Bailey website.

 

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/uk-midmarket-growth-masks-stagnation-reveals-price-bailey-302822895.html

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