Full-Time

Product Engineer – Mid-Level

Accurx

Accurx

201-500 employees

Unified communication platform for NHS clinicians

Compensation Overview

£40k - £80k/yr

London, UK

Hybrid

3 days on-site per week at Shoreditch office; office-first culture.

Category
Software Engineering
Required Skills
REST APIs
Requirements
  • You comfortable building production software across the stack; you may be strongest in backend or frontend, but you can follow a problem across both to own a feature end-to-end.
  • You have a proven ability to reason about systems; you can break ambiguous problems into tractable pieces, spotting trade-offs and second-order effects before they become incidents.
  • You are comfortable with ambiguity and early-stage problem definition; you shape the work rather than wait for a finished specification.
  • You treat engineering quality as part of the job; you manage technical debt pragmatically, review AI-generated output critically, and push for the right architectural decisions under real constraints.
  • You have curiosity about AI tools and how they change the way you work, with the judgment to know when to rely on them and when not to.
  • You start from the user problem, not the technology; you know what to build, what not to build, and why, including what to delegate, what needs human judgment, and what shouldn't exist at all in the AI era.
  • You can break ambiguous problems into tractable pieces and see how those pieces connect across boundaries; you spot seams, trade-offs, and second-order effects — thinking both from big to small and small to big.
  • You can pick up unfamiliar code, systems, and assess AI-generated output; you spot flaws before being told, and you understand why something is wrong.
  • You have strong expertise in at least one area and can use it to build, debug, and improve real systems effectively; you know what “great” looks like in your domain and can reliably get there.
  • You own outcomes, not just tasks; you influence across teams, navigate disagreement to reach the right answer, own your mistakes, and push for wins that matter.
  • You actively experiment with AI tools to push the boundaries of what's possible today, with the skepticism to avoid overhyping what they can do.
  • You're actively learning and experimenting with AI tools, pushing the boundary of what's possible today, with the healthy scepticism that keeps you from overhyping what they can do.
Responsibilities
  • Owning features end-to-end: from refining the problem with clinicians and product managers through to architecture, implementation, rollout, and long-term evolution.
  • Engaging directly with NHS GPs, practice staff and patients to build a genuine understanding of the problems you're solving — research sessions, visiting practices.
  • Designing architecture and API boundaries with the broader system in mind, not just the immediate surface.
  • Holding the quality bar for what you ship: not just that the code works, but that the product is reliable, intuitive and safe in a clinical context.
  • Making the architectural calls that keep our codebase sustainable — improving system health alongside shipping features, not instead of it.
  • Pushing back constructively when something is wrong, and committing fully when a decision has been made.

Accurx provides a unified communication platform for the NHS that connects clinicians and patients to coordinate care. Delivered as software, it lets NHS staff message, schedule, and manage patient interactions across primary and secondary care, replacing fragmented channels. It stands out through large-scale NHS integration, high user adoption among GPs, and demonstrated impact on workflow efficiency and patient access. Its goal is to improve healthcare communication and patient care by offering a reliable, scalable tool that shortens wait times and supports public health initiatives.

Company Size

201-500

Company Stage

Series B

Total Funding

$47.9M

Headquarters

London, United Kingdom

Founded

2016

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • George Eliot Hospital adopts Accurx trust-wide to cut waiting lists by 20%.
  • NHS App batch messaging boosts patient engagement through official infrastructure.
  • AI Scribe expands into acute trusts, capturing workflow automation market share.

What critics are saying

  • NHS DACS framework obsoletes Accurx messaging in 12-24 months via FHIR standards.
  • EMIS and TPP native AI scribes erode 350k users in 6-12 months without extra cost.
  • Babylon Health acquires 20% GP contracts, undercutting Accurx SaaS pricing in 12-18 months.

What makes Accurx unique

  • Accurx integrates with EMIS, SystmOne, and NHS App for seamless FHIR communications.
  • Accurx Scribe automates transcription and coding into clinical records via Tandem Health.
  • Accurx serves primary, secondary, and mental health with unified patient messaging.

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Benefits

Wellness Program

Flexible Work Hours

Enhanced parental leave policy

Private health insurance

Health Insurance

Remote Work Options

Hybrid Work Options

Stock Options

Company Equity

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Mental Health Support

Gym Membership

Phone/Internet Stipend

Home Office Stipend

Conference Attendance Budget

Professional Development Budget

Family Planning Benefits

Fertility Treatment Support

Adoption Assistance

Parental Leave

Paid Vacation

Paid Holidays

Paid Sick Leave

Relocation Assistance

Employee Referral Bonus

Sabbatical Leave

Tuition Reimbursement

Training Programs

Professional Certification Support

Mentorship Program

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Meal Benefits

Pet Insurance

Caregiver Support

Commuter Benefits

Childcare Support

Elder Care Support

Legal Services

Employee Discounts

Company Social Events

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

0%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

-2%
HTN Health Tech News
Mar 30th, 2026
Ambient scribe technology guidance for healthcare and information governance professionals launches.

Ambient scribe technology guidance for healthcare and information governance professionals launches. March 30, 2026 12:19 pm Guidance for healthcare and information governance professionals on the use of ambient scribe technology has launched, covering checks to be made before use, consent, transparency, checking for accuracy, the lawful basis for processing of data, record retention and storage, and more. It notes that healthcare professionals should check whether the AI product they wish to use has been approved by their organisation, and what rules should be followed for its use to ensure legal requirements and regulatory guidelines are adhered to. It is appropriate to rely on implied consent, rather than having to seek explicit consent from patients for the use of the technology, NHS England states, but professionals should still maintain transparency and share that the tech is in use. If that use is for individual care, patients and service users should be informed at the beginning of the session, it continues, sharing an example script detailing what the tool does and how the data it collects will be used. The user of the technology is both responsible and accountable for the accuracy of the information added to patient records, according to NHSE, with healthcare professionals encouraged to check information and consider taking additional steps to validate accuracy. "When you use the content produced by an ambient scribe, it is good practice to indicate within the output that it has been produced with the help of an ambient scribe," it adds. For information governance professionals, NHSE emphasises the importance of organisations independently assessing tools for compliance with data protection and confidentiality, involving decision makers including CIOs, CCIOs, and SIROs, and establishing a lawful basis for the processing of data by an ambient scribe. For GDPR, the most likely lawful bases are article 6 (1) (e) public task, or article 9 (2) (h) health and care, it outlines, whereas for the common law duty of confidentiality the most likely lawful basis is implied consent. As well as letting patients and service users know that the technology is in use at the beginning of their session, NHSE recommends updating privacy notices with details on how data is processed, exploring ways to promote understanding of the use of ambient scribes, such as with leaflets or posters in waiting areas, and ensuring transparency materials are appropriate for different audiences. Once a summary produced by ambient scribe has been signed off, the original recording and transcript can be deleted, NHSE suggests, with the outputs then subject to retention periods in line with their use or eventual storage, such as those for EPR. Deleting records from other storage locations ensures information isn't duplicated and reduces risk of being retained for longer than necessary, it concludes, noting: "If any data is stored with the provider of the tool at any time, you must give them clear instructions on storage and retention and ensure that they are able to comply with these." Information governance professionals must document who the controller and processor is for each processing activity, with the controller to be the relevant health and care organisation where used for individual care, NHSE confirms. This requires health and care organisations to determine the purpose of any processing, give clear instructions to the tool's provider on data processing, storage, and retention, and ensure responsibilities are clearly documented. If an AI supplier determines a portion of the means or purposes of processing, it could then be considered a joint controller with shared responsibility for compliance with data protection legislation, NHSE outlines. NHSE also explores the potential for ambient scribes to introduce security vulnerabilities both in their processing of data as well as their integration with systems, highlighting the need for organisations to engage with tech and security specialists to assess the risks prior to using the technology. Guidance on assessing security in AI is offered by the ICO, it notes. Also of note are individuals' rights to object to the processing of their data; to receive copies of information held about them including recordings or transcriptions from ambient scribe tools; to rectify inaccurate or incomplete data; to request erasure; or to request that the processing of their data be restricted. Wider trend: Ambient Voice Technology NHS England's Transformation Directorate has published a list of 19 suppliers who have evidenced the criteria required to be part of its self-certified Ambient Voice Technology (AVT) registry - "a national capability to support safe and effective scaling and adoption of AVT across the health and care system". The 19 suppliers include 33n, Accurx, Anathem, Aprobrium (Lexacom), Beam Up, Corti, Dictate IT, eConsult, HealthOrbit AI, Heidi Health, Lyrebird Health, Microsoft Dragon, Optum (EMIS), Pungo t/a Joy, Scribetech, Tandem, Tortus, T-Pro, and X-On Health. University Hospitals of Leicester (UHL) and University Hospitals of Northamptonshire (UHN) have awarded a £1.9 million contract to Accurx for the provision of its Ambient Voice Technology solution. The award follows a competitive procurement that saw a total of five tenders evaluated, according to the trusts, seeking to find a supplier capable of implementing and deploying AVT to support both clinical and non-clinical documentation across multiple hospital sites. The solution will be used to capture consultations and draft documents such as clinical notes, summaries, and letters, to be reviewed by clinicians for accuracy before being sent out to patients. A study exploring informed consent for ambient documentation using generative AI in outpatient care has highlighted nuances including that patients are more likely to self-censor when talking about mental and sexual health or illicit activity during consultations. The study, published in Jama Network Open, was conducted from March to December 2024 in ambulatory practices across specialities in a "large urban academic health centre", involving 18 clinicians and 103 patients in an operational proof-of-concept. 74.9 percent of patients reported being comfortable or very comfortable with the use of ambient documentation, with this rising to 81.6 percent when provided with basic information about the technology. However, when participants were given information on AI features, data storage, and corporate involvement, this decreased to 55.3 percent.

HTN Health Tech News
Sep 2nd, 2025
Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust introduces new hearing technology for adults and children

Accurx recently partnered with Tandem Health to launch an AI scribe tool for use across the NHS.

All Health Tech
Jul 9th, 2025
Insights from HLTH Europe 2025: Top healthtech trends, key takeaways and more

Tandem's AI integrates with Accurx's platform to instantly summarise consultations and reduce documentation time.

Medscape
Jun 9th, 2025
AI Scribes Cutting GPs' Admin and Boosting Patient Care

Health technology company Accurx recently teamed up with Tandem Health to launch Accurx Scribe, a tool that can transcribe, summarise, and code patient consultations into a trust's clinical records, with functionality to write back to EMIS and SystmOne.

HTN Health Tech News
May 1st, 2025
Accurx launch AI scribing tool for use across the NHS

Accurx has partnered with Tandem Health, a European health tech company, to launch an AI scribe tool for use across the NHS.