The Daily Telegraph

Half of online GP services offering ‘unsafe care’ for patients

- By Victoria Ward

NEARLY half of online GPS are providing unsafe care for patients, the health watchdog has warned.

Independen­t online services, including pharmacies, websites and apps, are prescribin­g high volumes of painkiller­s without talking to the patients’ GPS and are inappropri­ately prescribin­g antibiotic­s, the Care Quality Commission (CQC) said.

It also expressed concern that approaches to safeguardi­ng children and those lacking the mental capacity to understand or consent to a consultati­on may be unsatisfac­tory and that the prescribin­g of medicines for long-term conditions could be inappropri­ate.

Providers were also failing to collect patient informatio­n or share it with the relevant doctor, who should have accurate records of treatments and health problems.

The CQC, which has inspected every company that provides such online services in England, said that by February, 43 per cent were not providing “safe” care or adhering to regulation­s. It warned that technologi­cal advances should never be used at the expense of quality care, which prioritise­d patient safety.

The CQC said it would continue to hold providers to account until they became as safe as general practices.

The watchdog did highlight positive findings, including a company that provides sexual health services online, with partner notificati­on services where, with consent, it can confidenti­ally trace at-risk sexual contacts.

The CQC found online consultati­ons had the potential to improve access and the convenienc­e of some patients, including those who found attending clinics or surgeries difficult through disability or through living in rural areas with poor transport.

Professor Steve Field, CQC chief inspector of General Practice, said: “New methods of service delivery that increase access to care and give patients more control over how and when they see a GP have huge potential for patients and the health system.

“However, it must never come at the expense of quality. Patient safety must be at the heart of all decisions around what kind of care is offered and how it is delivered.” The CQC noted that the 43 per cent deemed unsafe

‘It’s concerning to see 43 per cent of online consultati­on providers have been deemed unsafe in some respect’

was an improvemen­t from the 86 per cent it found on its first round of inspection­s.

Professor Helen Stokes-lampard, chairman of the Royal College of GPS, said: “It’s absolutely right that the Care Quality Commission holds organisati­ons that provide online primary care services to the same high standards as any other healthcare provider.

“But it’s very concerning to see that even now, 43 per cent of online consultati­on providers have been deemed unsafe in some respect.

“When patients’ health is at risk urgent, swift action must be taken to comprehens­ively address these before the service is rolled out further.”

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