Daily Mirror

£240M.. TO STAY ON HOLD FOR YOUR GP

Tories trumpet phone technology but Labour calls for medics over muzak

- BY JOHN STEVEN Political Editor john.stevens@mirror.co.uk @johnesteve­ns

HUNDREDS of millions of pounds will be spent on giving patients hold music when they call their GP.

Around £240million will go on installing new phone systems in doctors’ surgeries, ministers will announce today.

They said the overhaul will mean patients never get an engaged tone

But it leaves the prospect of them being stuck listening to annoying tunes and repeatedly told they are in a queue as they wait for their call to be answered.

Labour last night said patients want more doctors, not “better hold music”.

Wes Streeting, the Shadow Health Secretary, said the “shallow offer” showed Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was out of touch with patients. He added:

“The reason people can’t get a GP appointmen­t is the Conservati­ves have cut 2,000 GPs. Better hold music isn’t going to change that.

“Nothing in this announceme­nt will train more doctors, allow patients to choose a face-toface appointmen­t, or bring back the family doctor so patients see the same GP each time.”

Mr Streeting called on the Government to adopt Labour’s plan to train 7,500 more doctors a year, which it says could be paid for by axing the non-dom tax status. That would “enable patients to easily book appointmen­ts to see the doctor they want”, Mr Streeting said.

The Government claims the new technology will end the 8am scramble for

PAINFUL

Ringing to see doctor appointmen­ts. An average practice of 10,000 patients often receives more than 100 calls in the first hour of Mondays, the Department of Health said.

It said of the new system: “Patients will receive a queue position, a call-back option, and their call can be directly routed to the right profession­al.”

It will be integrated with clinical systems so staff can identify patients and their details from their number.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay said he was improving technology, increasing staffing and reducing bureaucrac­y in a bid to cut waiting lists. He added: “We are making real progress, with 10% more GP appointmen­ts happening every month than before the pandemic.”

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